How To Stop Your Puppy From Biting Before It is Too Late
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- Опубліковано 1 чер 2023
- Do you struggle with a new puppy incessantly nipping at you? Look no further! In this educational and practical video, Jennifer Broome, a professional dog trainer, will teach you effective methods to put an end to your puppy's biting tendencies.
Jennifer will provide guidance on understanding the reasons behind puppy biting and how to differentiate between normal puppy behavior and problematic biting. She will demonstrate reinforcement techniques that encourage your puppy to cease biting and engage in appropriate play behavior instead.
Throughout the video, Jennifer underscores the significance of consistency and patience in puppy training. She offers valuable suggestions on how to make training a pleasant experience for both you and your dog.
With Jennifer's expert advice, you will be able to cultivate a happier and healthier relationship with your puppy. So, don't delay any further, click the play button now, and bid farewell to puppy biting!
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We would love to hear your approach to fixing this problem!
I gently grab the scruff and make him lay on his side and make him stay for a little bit .that or when he bites I'll grab
I force my dogs to watch Tim Allen movies till they are good it doesn't take long.
@@lilfarmer lol
If you never let your dog bite its very very bad. Say a kid is with this dog and this dog is fully grown. The kid keeps smacking the dog with a sandal. So the dogs perceives this as a threat. The dog has no idea how strong he is because he's never played. This is a very common and very bad situation. Most likely the dog will attempt to kill the child and had no idea he's strong enough to.
Just say "Ouch!" even if their bite didn't hurt to reinforce the idea that their bite can hurt others. Idea being they don't want to hurt you so it they find out that's what biting does they'll stop. Seemed to work well they'd catch on fast.
😮 i thought she was gonna bite him back
I would have
Lol dame😂
Old school
Omg same 😂😂😂😂
Same 😂😂😂
"give him a taste of his own medicine"
*bites the dog back*
That's what I do
@@Trump-Is-YourDaddywhat the heck r u saying
Nah but seriously will in this case I got a question for you how do u bite him
@@Hadjer-here bite his ears. I actually have a puppy right now. I tried what she's saying it didn't work too well. I went back to my way, puppy bit me so I grabbed him and bit his ear. It took one time, he got the message.
@@Trump-Is-YourDaddy damn it definitely still weird to me lol🤣🤣
@@Hadjer-here I always put it like this. Dogs are pack animals, their pack leader will always show force with a growl or bite. It's basically in their DNA to understand what it means. Much easier to understand than whatever she's doing haha.
I just screamed loud when my dog did it and she quickly figured out that it was not good…
Figured out? You make it sound like the dog sat down and carefully considered the pros and cons of his action.
@@krane15 English might not be their first language, you see... And it most likely isn't.
This is what worked for me with my most recent pup as well.
My dog bit me harder hahah
@@krane15no, it actually works
Dogs learn from their puppy siblings that if one screams, then they are biting too hard or playing too hard
So if we do the same, it should work
When training a dog, you need to understand the pack behavior. Puppies socialize with their mouth. When a puppy bites too hard while playing, their playmate yelps. The puppy lets off and play resumes. By this means, the puppy learns bite control, so that they don't bite too hard. This play and social interaction is an important activity during the puppy stage. Without this play and training, the adult dog lacks bite control.
spot on... this "trainer" is lazy and deserves a "taste of their own medicine"
Yeah I agree. Most puppies learn not to bite after a few verbal boundaries
Doesn't work for all breeds. My shepherd is a working line and it excites her to come at us harder. Keeping calm and collected* doesn't give her energy to feed on.
Yea my puppy is a blue heeler and she learned not to bite my Australian Shepard to hard and vice versa but she has not learned to stop biting us though not hard and our clothes but our kids would have scratch marks and scabs and holes in clothes all over bc of our puppy not learning what is allowed and who to chew on. She has lots of free range and toys and another dog to practice with but she still didn’t have boundaries with us so this technique has worked wonders immediately!
I have a 15 week old lab and have done the same thing. Worked wonders.
It works! Just applied it to 10 week old puppy. Hooray!
All of a sudden, professionals came to the chat
Thought you were gonna bite his paws when you said "taste his own medicine"
Been doing this for years with my dogs. It works when verbal, redirect and tongue press methods didn't. She's not doing it hard. And side note: she's dog trainer as well. Field trial, hunt test, hunting dog trainers don't really have the time to muck about, because they're usually training their dogs to.... Ya know, go hunting with them. Can't have them being loud and jumpy or they'll scare away the birds. Having a calm dog that knows verbal commands, whistle blasts and hand signals help keep the dogs safe. Most hunting/working/retriever dogs are VERY well taken care of by their handlers, because ya can't afford for them to be injured or sick. Field trials and hunt tests start in the Spring and run through the Summer, sometimes into early Fall, but USUALLY hunting season starts early Fall and runs until December. And when these dogs aren't ACTIVELY participating in Hunt Trials, Field Tests or hunting, they're being trained every chance the handler can get. My step dad raises and trains bird dogs (as I call them) and him and his other dog trainer friends are CONSTANTLY out with the dogs, training or working them. And those dogs got treated better than myself when out working them. You get injured, "Walk it off. You'll be alright." The dog gets injured, immediately stopping everything and checking them over, followed with a vet visit as soon as possible just to be sure everything is okie dokie. These comments, though. 😂😂😂
I agree she did well in this video
But in another video of her critiquing how people hold their dogs, she was being very forceful with it and giving it little to no slack of the leash, pulling its head up.
One of the strangest comments sections I've ever seen. This seems extremely ethical and effective. I've bitten the inside of my own mouth before. I made sure not to do it again anytime soon! Plenty of my friends have watched their dogs bite me hard without reacting in any way. Obviously these example dogs doesn't have a concept of the force they are applying. I'll be following for more content; my elderly folks are taking in a puppy this summer. Want them and the pup safe, healthy, and well exercised!
Please start actually educating yourself on dogs instead of trusting random peoples advice on UA-cam Shorts. These methods are just extremely outdated.
It's like a teacher spanking a kid in school for giving the wrong answer. I don't like comparing dogs to kids, but: Yes, we did those things back then, but nowadays we just know better, don't we? Why keep on doing them?
@@JayEichendorff How do you think dogs teach each other not to bite?
@@Go.Sophron Are you serious? Are you a dog?
@@JayEichendorff You're not very persuasive in your argument. I'd love to hear your correct methodology. But since it hasn't been provided; I'd be far wiser to take this demonstrated experts opinion into consideration, assuming id never heard another than to trust you
@@Go.SophronLol what are you trying to gain with this, Erin? I'm certainly not going to write you some kind of detailed explanation in a UA-cam comment. Are you really trying to gain actual scientific information about dogs on social media? That's sad.
Educate yourself. It's not that hard. And please stop bothering me, thanks!
Some labs respond well to a loss of attention when they bite and praising when they behave if they're eager to either play or please.
Excellent. Thank you for that.
Mine didn't know how hard he could bite at first. Adopted at 3 years old from rescue centre. Lady wife took the brunt of it (bruised legs). Through further playing he has now learnt the right pressure to apply.
I can't believe this is an actual thing to do, I did it just randomly when I got my first puppy, and now he just play bites with me when we're actually playing. Thank you.
Finally, someone who isn’t trying to pass off the “redirect technique” as a viable option for a working dog. My question is what would you suggest if you have a super high drive working field Bred lab that IS aggressively biting? Not all the time, but I have a very very high drive 10-12 week old puppy who has started to chill out at 14 weeks, but every night about 7:30-8:30pm he goes bonkers & it seems like he’s testing me for pack leadership. He’ll get very excited & SPRINT sometimes WHEELIE around the house & jump up on my leg, start biting (not mouthing or nibbling) but full on biting my hand, shirts & shorts, then occasionally dry hump my leg & growl. I know how I’d have handled this 20 years ago, but I don’t want to break his spirits or damage his confidence & drive. I’ve had him for 4 weeks now & the last 2 weeks I’ve gotten him to stop biting, but occasionally he gets so excited he bites until he gets corrected verbally or that lip on his own teeth technique. It’s gotten better, but I’m more concerned about future puppies like this? I exercise the bejesus out of him with training exercises, fun exercise, work exercise, & OB routine & training exercise. so it’s not like I keep him in a crate all day & night. I work him as much as a little puppy can be worked. Now it’s 3 nights a week, as opposed to every night he goes bananas for an hour then it’s like he’s a totally different puppy & passes out for the night like it never happened. I don’t want to use a prong collar or e collar yet. Just asking what you’d do in THIS instance?
A vocal correction works, too. I'd hate for people to replicate this at home unsafely, for the dog and the hand's sake.
Vocal corrections could work very well for some dogs but not so much for others
Same here.
Puppies can not usually maim a person. And if you do this hard enough to seriously injure the dog, you've done it incorrectly. Is your point that this can be done incorrectly, and therefore should not be done at all?
@@GundogsOnlinei wouldnt do that to a puppy, id feel like an ahole especially if he/she bleeds. Id do the cesar Milan way, shush correction. The tap simulates biting.
@@donnypotsmoker puppies cant but a full grown dog can
I had instant success with squealing when they bite me. They understand that really quickly and know what it means. He stopped biting almost immediately
Great simple video thank you
Baby animals especially mammals will usually be mouthie and you are 100% correct to correct it early.
Mother dogs and their litter mates correct the behavior and when removed from the mom and litter mates we become the mom! I have used the method you show and also when they start to nip or bite blowing in their face
Both will stop the offending behavior Mostly using distraction. Puppies and other mammal babies learn about their enviornment through their mouths and rec. nourishment and gratification to chew and when teething to calm the pain. I have American Akitas and Belgian Malinios puppies and both are SUPER MOUTHY. Using both distractions is a daily and frequent correction especially during weaning.
awesome. thank you.
As a 5th year vet student, this is something called positive punishment and it is the least affective way to stop bad behaviour. It causes pain, fear, and even sometimes distrust in the person and can cause fear-based aggression.
So what to do my Labrador is just 2 months old
I'm gonna give this a try on my 11 week mix breed puppy. I and my boyfriend have lots of marks on our hands and arms from the dog's play. Plus she likes to bite feet, and my boyfriend is a partial quadriplegic and is unable to defend himself.
Tried it with my cat
It currently wants catnip for my release, help
Best comment!!! 😂
As I'm sure you found out, cats are totally different
"tried this on my cat"
Best comment hands down 😅
I completely agree with your tactics
My dog goes to mouth then i’ll say “Nova, you better not” then starts licking because i caught her😂😂😂😂 it’s the funniest thing ever. She’s like i’m just giving kisses🥰😂😂😂
Seems like a super gentle method of learning not to bite the hand that feeds via their own instruments. Well done.
I do that also... keep up the good job mam for educating people
I could never do this to my dog when I trained my puppy I walked away from her when she would do this
why you holding lil homie like that 😭💖
Yep they gotta know it hurts that’s the only way I found works also
It looks like your thumb is going down his throat in the beginning when he first starts biting. What does that help with?
Pressing on the tongue to cause an adverse reaction of not closing their jaws. Obviously you’ve never worked a day in your life with anything other than a chihuahua.
@@mordecai9856 You could’ve left the comment out. Would’ve made your answer a helluva lot more valid. Voiding the facts you state with ignorant hate is such a waste of energy. Better yourself.
@@LLBoobay no thanks I’m good I don’t have time to deal with stupid people online
@@mordecai9856you do have the time for that, you liar.
@@mordecai9856 You don't have time to deal with stupid people online, but you have the time to respond in the first place? That person is stupid because they asked a basic question in a civil manner? Grow up.
My Doberman nibbles on my pants for attention. When we're playing ball and I tease her, she gets mad and barks while biting my pants. Pretty funny dog.
@GundogsOnline great way to teach a puppy that it's bad to play and they will never pick up a toy
“Look at my cool retrieving gun dog!” “Great, what does it do?”
“It runs up to the game I shot and stands there because I traumatised it into not wanting to put anything in its mouth ever!”
Thank you! I’m going to try this when I get home
Please Don’t!!
Most excellent
I just holler ow, sometimes quite dramatically lol. Works with most puppies and kittens but if they are being stubborn I use your method.
That worked for mine, too. He's a Setter/GSD/Chow/Pitt mix that's 4 now and doesn't mouth or bite. With some of those breeds in him, it was pretty important to stop the behavior. It took a few weeks to eliminate it totally when he was a puppy but I was happy with it. No hate on what the trainer is showing us, either. It probably works faster. I'll keep it in the back of my mind.
@@Erin-unsalted Mine is a Blue Lacy mix and they are known for being raptors lol. The only time I would make them bite themselves is if they're just not getting it and it truly hurts me. And reinforce it with and ow of my own so they can better associate the meaning. The dog I have now is so sweet once he realized he was hurting me he never wanted to again and completely stopped the biting.
Or just yelp... i love to play with dogs. Its how they play with each other. And as long as you can stop it and teach to have a soft mouth it isnt a problem. Never had a problem. Id rather create a bond then take it away. It just shows the dog wanna play with you and is great for the future.
Option 2. U dont want it anyways. Give them a toy or something to chew on. If they dont stop, yelp. If not, a correction is then a last resort.
Yeah yelping is the preferred method and socializing your dog. Puppies aren’t aware of how hard they bite so playing and yelling shows the dog what hurts.
We found with teething ice cubes were amazing and once the puppy was vaccinated enough dog park, 3-5xweek. The puppies learned so quick from the older dogs teaching what hurts.
@@annonone93 i wouldnt recommend dog parks tho. Proper socialization is when you have older dogs you trust. Not random dogs. Also to not let the puppy meet every dog they see. No leash and greets. Meet up with people you trust and watch people and dogs go by. Go to diff places. And its also smart to teach them cues as puppies. Sit, down, heel and ect (what you want them to know)
What can happen when you go to a dog park/ day care is creating fearfull and/or a stressed dog. Even if you dont always know it. Many get a reactive dog doing so. Rather meet dogs you know and trust. And dogs you know you will meet (like if there is a fam dog, a friends dog or such) if you can)
With leash and greets you can also get reactivity. Doesnt have to be fear reactive but barrier frustration. Caused by over exitement, so they just wanna rush over to greet. And teaching rush isnt a good idea either. Some puppy classes do so, so its important to do proper reaserch on what trainer one find. Many dont know about dogs or are compulsion trainers. And what breeder one find. Its not a good idea to support back yard breeders. As they breed health problems and have bad ethics. Rather find an ethical breeder or try adopting from an ethical shelter.
Its a bit long and a lot of diff things but it all ties in on each other. A good breeder also socialize before they are delivered. And much more😊 but thats whay i would say
Thats cruel there are other ways of stopping them .
Please elaborate.
Which are?
What she is doing in this clip is teaching her dog not to do this behavior because he does not want YOU to cause HIM pain. A better approach is to teach your dog not to do this behavior because he doesn't want to cause YOU pain. Dogs are extremely empathetic and don't want to harm the people they love. Shout (as convincingly as possible) OUCH! withdraw your hand and walk away/disengage. He will learn that what he did wasn't enjoyable for you and stopped a positive interaction.
Some dogs just don't give a fuck or do not come to understand that they hurt you.
@@martered2674 I suppose that in rare circumstances when you find an animal that doesn’t have the ability to understand basic empathy; while you can train that animal using the threat of pain and violence (as demonstrated in this video) that animal is going to be extremely unpredictable and dangerous.
In animals, just like in humans sociopathy does exist but I would wager that in a majority of cases it is the training approach that is the issue rather than the animal itself. A relationship based on fear and dominance is not a sturdy foundation in which to build a human-animal relationship.
I can’t convincingly pretend to be hurt. What you’re suggesting works without it anyway.
depends on the breed, a dominate breed would respond to that advice by thinking they're the boss. and the boss can do what they want
That works for a very small percentage of puppies
Flick on the nose works too ...
.
Puppy biting is totally normal- especially during teething. It’s how they explore the world, similar to children. Bite inhibition is necessary for a puppies development. Giving them “a taste of their own medicine” is not appropriate nor is it effective.
How do you recommend stopping that behavior?
Is not appropriate to "nibble" on humans especially children
with human children my sister dealt with our cousin by asking if she wanted to bite her. then proceeded to stick her finger down the kids throat as soon as she opened her mouth to bite. the brat cried to her mom then stopped biting
I wish i would have seen this video three months ago. Got a 6wk old german shepherd pup that chose my wife as a chew toy. It took about two months to completely correct it.
It was more about teaching my wife to assert her dominance and remain calm and be a leader.
Nice correction method, scruff doesn’t work to well in my experience
Wow, I tried this with my 15 week old German shepherd, and he stopped biting me within 5 sessions of his own medicine. Thank you.
How do u know the amount of pressure so u really don’t hurt the pup??
I always try to keep their lip between their teeth and my hand as they gnaw to protect my hands. Guess i juat skipped a step haha
The best way so fix this problem if a firm no and pushing them away doesn't work (always try that method first!) Is to push down their tongue not enough to be painful but enough to make it uncomfortable and as soon as they let go redirect them with a toy. This is teething and play behaviour not aggression and should be redirected not stopped in a painful manner. Im no dog trainer but neither is this idiot in the video. Do some PROPER research before listening to 1 random person on UA-cam
As a dog trainer I agree with your response. I’ve found that redirecting the unwanted behaviors into acceptable ones is sooo much more effective in the long run. Punishment will only go so far, and they instinctively either run, fight back or overly apathy. Not only this, but the unwanted behavior is only unwanted from your perspective. The dog clearly has a reason for doing it; they naturally only decide to do what makes them happy or will make them happier. Chewing is one of these natural methods that release endorphins and other happy hormones, so showing them what to chew on and then topping it with more reward is like making a child a king overnight. Of course they’ll want to stay and do more! You’re absolutely correct.
Dude stop that, you’re spreading false information I’m not trying to be mean but you are wrong there is a better way than that the pups could bleed and get infected
Agreed.
@@iLoveTheBamxsame
What is that way?
@@shingtome2179 huh?
Don’t be so sensitive. She’s not doing it hard enough to puncture. Something can still hurt a little without breaking skin. Plus, babies, especially dog babies are resilient as fuuck and even if the wrong person did it and punctured a little, the puppy will heal super quickly.
Biting a good habit. If you teach the dog right he'll learn how hard to bite and not to bite. He's playing to understand the world the same way we did as kids. Plays very import. It'd good to let the dog bite you but be stern when he bites hard. Don't let the dog bite you when he's fully grown.
This was the only thing that worked for me with a dominant little male German shepherd
I've been watching so many videos on this subject because my new puppy won't stop biting. None of these techniques work. I can't wear shorts because he constantly bites my calves, it's terrible. I tried not giving him attention, making a sharp noise, redirecting him to something he can chew and praising him, this and a few other techniques, to no avail. 😢
What worked for me was: immediately stoping playing and firmly saying : no! Gentle. It worked perfectly
Teaching the word no, is way better than damaging your dogs cheeks.
Shut up 🤫
How do you do that
@@BRproductions6173 Train with some food on the ground, and use the NO command when he/she comes close. Never let the dog eat the food, as no means no. Give a better reward food when it complies. Build it up little by little, until you can walk out the room, without the dog eating the food. Now you will have learned your dog a new command...and if your dog wants to follow your lead, he will listen, and understand no = no.
Thanks god you did not bite him back, he is just a lil innocent puppy , there shud be better methods to stop biting.
not a fan of this. Agree with the firsr part, to nip it in the bud and stop it early as its bad practice. But thats about it. The rest of the video is not correct, or even okay.
She says she finds this is to be one of the easiest ways to stop biting behavior. Easy doesnt=right.
These techniques and advice are bad practice. Animals learn through other methods beside pain. Take more time and put in more effort with your animal and modify behavior in a less harsh way. Have patience, you wouldn't like someone correcting a natural behavior you exhibited as a child by pinching you. Like if a uninformed "dog trainer" is spreading false/vague info/"tips" and irritating me, do I pinch or slap her to get her to stop? 🙄 Just because its a dog doesnt mean it learns much differently, its all about repetition with them. Much like a kid I'd imagine...
Its not only about mimicry of the behavior. I would remove my hand and attention away from my hound mix puppy for a few minutes when she did this and she stopped.
My dog is border collie, deerhound and whippet, she was as nippy as any border collie puppy I’d ever trained, but I never had to resort to causing her pain to get her to do anything, least of all to stop puppy biting. If you get a puppy, the absolute minimum you should know is how to get them to pee outside without resorting to rubbing their noses in their own waste (and without using puppy pads, because they’re unnecessary and solely an exercise in frustration for both you and the dog) and how to stop puppy biting without needing to destroy your relationship with your dog immediately.
All I see in this video is how a lot of working dog trainers have gotten too stuck in their ways with regard to punishment in dog training. And you can call it “correction” all you please, but it’s still punishment, and punishment does nothing but reinforce the punisher.
Dog barks, trainer punishes dog, dog stops barking, trainer is “rewarded” with the behaviour they wanted. Take away the threat of punishment, dog barks again. It’s why bark collars don’t work long term unless you leave it on forever. I’d rather show my dog what I do want by rewarding when they’re doing what I want and offer a reward every time than punish them every time they’re not doing what I want. But hey, maybe that’s just because I’m not a psychopath who loves causing pain to animals just learning how to navigate their world. Maybe I should shove the next Lego brick my nephews tries to eat into his windpipe, just so he understands the consequences of putting things in his mouth? 🤷🏻♀️
Somethings off .
There's something wayyy off about this Lady.
Agree. These techniques and advice are bad practice. Animals learn through other methods beside pain. She says she finds this is to be one of the easiest ways to stop biting behavior. Easy doesnt=right. Take more time and put in more effort with your animal and modify behavior in a less harsh way. Have patience, you wouldn't like someone correcting a natural behavior you exhibited as a child by pinching you. Its not only about mimicry of the behavior. I would remove my hand and attention away from my hound mix puppy for a few minutes when she did this and she stopped. She also yapped like crazy, thankfully something she outgrew before we had to make a attempt at modifying/fixing.
Agree 💯 there is just something wrong with the way she actually almost enjoys doing this to this poor puppy. Smh and also there are so many ways to do this without hurting a puppy especially when they look to us to protect them. Easy doesn’t always mean it’s the correct way I agree 100% with that statement
She looks like she's enjoying hurting the puppy. She gives psycho vibes for sure
@@shuepsx652this is what's off
He needs hugs and kisses and treats because he's sooon cuuute❤❤❤
I so same thing and say no bite. Worked for my 5 dogs and they're all great
I've always had dogs that responded to my overdramatically going "OWWWW" and pretending to cry. When I do that several times in a row, they don't do it anymore.
You’re so wrong. Behavioral training speaks completely against giving a dog a taste of their own medicine.
You want a puppy to stop biting you socialize the dog with older dogs and other dogs. Puppy’s learn bite inhibition from play and the dogs they interact with.
Also yelping too when you feel the dog is biting too hard and walk away. Dogs are social and want to be by you. You walk away you’ve removed yourself from the bite and you’ve shown the dog you don’t like that behavior. You ignore the bad and reward the good.
But you can’t expect anything from someone who uses shock collars. Where’s your credentials? From clown university
I used chew toys... dog learns, there are only specific things he is allowed to bite or chew on.
That is one cute puppy.
Or you can teach an all done command, or interject with a toy. Did that with my now 2 year old German Shepard and he know when it's time to play and when he does put teeth on me when we play it's so soft. But he still gets ampt about the play. When we are all done I say all done and he goes and gets his toy. It's important to still let a dog be a dog. Just let them know when it's to much.
My bordeaux mix has so much loose skin around his mouth, so he accidentally chewed on his lip as a puppy trying to chew me. He stopped in a second, so yes, this works. You don't have to force the mouth shut, though, but it's a great way for them to learn not to use too much pressure while playing. And of course, try to bring some toy that they are allowed to bite.
Puppies learn from each other by their verbal cues! “ Ow” etc teaches the puppy that they’ve hurt you! There’s no need to go this far for them to learn this!! Appalling really!
How about you learn about what you’re doing before you tell people what to and not too do 😂
Nevermind the fact that she is an expert
@@istvanvaradi3239 a hunter dont make you an expert. Know many with horrible straight up abusive ways but also people with ethical ways. Those who choose ethical, had top gun dogs.
(Not saying she is abusive. Its compareing hunters. Not all are good)
@@old4104no, you’re wrong, every single hunter is a perfect person.
I say stop and my puppy stops, I don't have to hurt my baby!
I'm so confused. You don't want to pick him up a certain way but you're okay with this method of getting a dog to stop biting? Redirection is best. Yelping. Giving a biting toy. Diversion.
I’ve always done that by pushing my dogs cheek inside his mouth with my finger so that when they close their mouth, they bite their cheek. They know not to bite hard now, it works for that, but it didn’t stop the nibbling, hence how I landed here.
And my dog bites sideways now like scissors that are loose hahaha
A shrill yelp works well too.
That method worked really well with my Dane puppy years ago. Didn’t work so well with my Cocker-mutt when he was a puppy (I was in HS). My sis bit him back one day, and that was the end of it lol.
This is in the best way to go about it. If you wouldn’t do this yourself, don’t do it to your dog in order to correct this type of behavior from other trainers that I watched just give them a toy or better yet a chew treat. Remember, if you wouldn’t do it yourself, don’t do it to an animal or another human.
i don't like this😢 hurting the doggy
.
I did that with my GSD he is still “mouthy” but only when he wants you to pet him and he is so gentle. I tell people not to pet him if they don’t want him grabbing their hands etc (even though he has never bitten down or hurt anyone, he is very large for the breed and it can scare people if they aren’t used to the breed and their characteristics)
Never seen this before.
I use a finger pressing on the tongue method.
Was about to write this, they're quick to try and spit your hand out
Thank y’all for this suggestion
What a lovely young man
Lol
Right on
There's something evil about this woman....
I cant stand her
Fr tho
despite this honestly not even being that bad? you're so right, this is absolutely ominous in the most indescribable way.
@@Balingy its the "taste of his own medisine". It just sounds like she enjoys it when she says it.
@@nooblord7822literally anyone can call themselves a dog trainer, I’ve heard one say “breathing is a privilege” while literally hanging a dog from a slip lead. Disgusting. I’ll stick to rewarding the behaviours I want while free-shaping and luring, and ignoring the behaviours I don’t. If this woman can’t teach a (notoriously soft mouthed breed like this) Labrador retriever not to bite too hard without punishing the dog, I’d hate to see what she’d have done to my border collie x deerhound when she was a puppy. Herding and nipping behaviours of a stubborn sheepdog combined with the chasing and biting behaviours of a coursing hound was a fun time for my clothes, and was over in about a week, because I focused her on play, which is all a puppy is looking for; acting out instincts through play.
Bro everyone is hating on her but she knows how dogs work
She's not a veterinarian.
Humans also work very well under the threat of pain, children and adults alike. Do you think that's ok?
She has no credentials in ethology, veterinary or even training studies, and she seems to enjoy inflicting pain on a baby... Don't defend her
@@shuepsx652exactly, you can create issues down the road big time
Ok just tried this with our 4 month old puppy who puts holes in my toddlers jacket and bites on out shoes while we walk or any thing she can see to grab on us or bites us when we try to pet her . Did it 3x and now she’s not only stopped biting after the third time I did the lip thing but she also refrained from jumping up and biting my clothes immediately but also I can pet her without a a single nip as well all within seconds and I treated her after she refrained of course🤩
This is disgusting, inflicting pain onto a puppy who is doing something completely natural. Totally agree to stop biting but there are much better ways.
this is when you are training a service/hunting dog. This is how you instill discipline. i understand what you’re saying because i definitely don’t do this but if i needed a well disciplined dog for hunting or for operations in the military you bet your ass this is what the training will look like. in a perfect world of the same daily life as a civilian you are ignorant to any type of hunting/hazardous environment and experience to know that this is how we train and what the result is if your dog is not disciplined. i’d rather be a stern teacher and have successful outcomes rather than be correct in the eyes of 9-5 civilians who are nice and cozy in their perfect world completely ignorant of real life and my undisciplined dog cause me to not succeed wether it’s giving away location in hunting or him not following commands against a threat and now both he and I are lost. all while you continue with ur little life regardless. if it isn’t effecting you you don’t care and then you continue to blabber anyway because you’re never wrong. bottom line this is a channel for people who rely on their dog for success in whatever field their in. this way works.
Mouthing and its healthy to do. Theyll learn pressure control
This is the only thing that has worked for me.
Does this work with a dog that is 9months old or should I use a different tactic
I’m going to give this a try, I really love my 5 month old old pup I adopted but his bitting is hindering our ability to bond cause I do t like that he has my hand all bruised scratched and pierced cause of his bitting I don’t want anything to make him loose trust in me this is so challenging all I want to do is bond with him I w notice the bitting decrease when we go in walks but it still happens
Remember bonding doesn’t just mean giving love and affection. Establishing boundaries and rules and yes, a hierarchy of who’s in charge is everything with animals. Discipline IS affection.
My now fourteen month old, intact male Pit mix still bites me intermittently in between more licking. I'm a little annoyed by his licking, but want to reinforce the more positive behavior. I notice the biting occurs during power struggles like ending a walk and aggressive leash biting/ shredding tug of war. Which even sometimes happens after an off leash free running session.
I had an elite pit bull I trained before UA-cam was this big. Now this Maltese/shitzhu/pitbull/racoon I have now won’t stop nipping or leaping 10ft in the air no matter what I do 😂 I’m trying this as soon as I get home
Halp! I’m giving my Lucy treats every time but it’s not stopping:(
That is smart
Thank you!! I'll give it a try.
I think soon we'll be sending dogs to college.
People complaining in the comment section should move on. This isn't animal abuse. Not even close to the definition.
💯
I agree this is not animal abuse but what it is, is very outdated and disregards the last 20ish years of research into animal behavior.
It's not a animal abuse but there's other, more effective ways that help with this behavior.
Puppy teeth are extremely sharp. I got four stitches in my upper lip from a puppy bite.
Or you can imitate a pain crying sound and they’ll stop that’s what I did with my Australian cattle dog
Works with human babies too!
what i do is make my arm (his toy) as boring and limp as possible and really assertively say ow, it works everytime 😂