Thursday, August 13, 2009

Cure Your Dogs Biting Problem

By The Willy Brothers

A dog with a biting problem is by far a pet owners worst nightmare. Weve all seen horror stories on the evening news about Pitt Bulls, Rottweilers, along with other breeds both large and small viscously attacking, postal carriers, children and other neighborhood pets. This is of course, the worst case scenario, but unfortunately dog biting does happen on occasion. This alone should be motivation enough for the responsible pet owner to make sure they stop a biting problem before it happens.

This training program should be ideally undertaken when the dog is very young, by letting it mix with those other dogs which have impeccable behavior credentials. These dogs will help you in training your dog against developing a biting habit, because they correct it in their natural way. Even though biting comes naturally to dogs, if you would like to own a pooch that does not easily bite people, it has to be trained sufficiently early to understand that biting is taboo.

Since most pups are taken away from their mother and siblings after only their second month of life, it is very important that you take on the mother roll. Dogs learn the majority of their behavior during the first four months of life, which is why rescue dogs and dogs that come from puppy mills are more prone to biting than dogs whom come from responsible and respected breeders.

Puppy mills are overcrowded animal dens run by callous dog owners, who are indifferent to caring for the puppies, and cares only about how much money a puppy would fetch. Puppies that have grown up in such an atmosphere obviously have even health problems, not to speak of emotional and behavioral problems. Since they have no exposure to good behavior, they do not understand what it is.

Even those, who own a rescue dog that easily bites others, can train the dog to give up its biting habit. It is definitely easier to train a young dog, but that does not mean that it is not possible to train an adult dog to be rid of its tendency to bite.

The same techniques apply when training an older dog as training a puppy, but the training must be done at a lower intensity. If your older dog is prone to biting other dogs and animals then it would not be wise to let him loose in a dog park with the hopes that the other dogs will cure him; just as it would be extremely unwise to let a dog with a child biting problem loose in a playground. Thats just a law suit waiting to happen.

Do the training in increments, walk the dog on the outskirts of the park until it gets used to the idea of other dogs being nearby, and gradually bring it closer and closer. Patience and dedication are the key ingredients to solving a dog biting problem.

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