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Cure Your Dogs Biting Problem

8 August 2009 No Comment

A dog that bites other dogs or humans is a hell of a problem for its master. We do hear stories about canines of all sizes, especially a Rottweiler or a Pitt Bull, mangling an unsuspecting passerby, or pouncing on kids who are playing around, or attacking other dogs. Though these reported instances may be rare happenings and not everyday occurrences, the fact remains that dogs do bite. That realization should be reason enough for every dog owner to nip the biting tendency of a dog in the bud itself, and preempt the possibility of it developing a biting habit.

A dog should be initiated into the anti-biting program early enough, when it is only a puppy and the best way to do it is by making it mingle with better behaved dogs. Those dogs will train it in their own way, and will also guide you in training it. Though biting is instinctive in the case of dogs, you have to instill into your dog early enough that biting cannot be tolerated, and that is the only way in which you can become the proud owner of a dog that does not bite.

A dog owner should essentially be a mother to his dog, because puppies are generally separated from their own mothers and family when they are barely eight weeks old. The initial four months of its life are the more formative ones in a dogs life when its behavioral patterns take shape, the reason why puppy mills dogs and rescue dogs bite more easily than those dogs bred by more reliable and distinguished breeders.

Puppy mills are dingy unhygienic places, commercial in nature, where all that the breeders are concerned about is the profit that they can make on a pooch. Puppies that are the products of these places have a wild temperament and have physical, mental, emotional, and behavioral problems. Since they have never seen good behavior, they have no idea what it is.

The good news is that if you have adopted a rescue dog with a biting problem, there is still hope for reform. It will be much easier, of course, if the dog is still a pup, but if you happen to rescue an adult with dog biting problems, it can still be taught to not bite.

The method of training a big dog is not all that different from training a young one, the only requirement being that it should be done a little mildly. If a grown dog has biting tendencies, it cannot be left unleashed among other dogs, hoping that it would get trained the natural way, taking the cue from the other dogs; nor can it be allowed to roam free in a playground if it has a tendency to bite children. That will just be sticking your neck out to be caught in a lawsuit.

The training has to be done step by step, by walking it around the vicinity of the park and familiarizing it to the presence of other dogs, and in stages letting it mingle with other dogs. Persistence and commitment are the secrets of curing a dog of its biting problem.

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