When we bring home that new dog, we don't always know what to expect, or what our dogs are trying to tell us, especially with first time owners, or people who have not had a dog as a puppy before. The aim of this blog entry is to help owners sift through the most common behaviours, and sort out what they really mean.
1. Non teething chewing or destruction
When puppies aren't teething, a common complaint with most owners (even from adult dogs on this) is that their dogs are chewing EVERYTHING. Shoes, tables, sofas, pillows, blankets, you name it - it all gets destroyed, even if there are toys out, and sometimes even if they're crated with just their blanket. What does this mean?
Boredom!
It means your dog has too much mental energy! Mental and physical energies are totally different, and have different needs. When you want to curl up with a good book, would a long hike help? Likely not. Dogs are the same way, and they get bored almost as fast as a toddler. Puppies are even worse, and need frequent challenges to their mind to feel fulfilled - they can't just go grab a book. So, when they're bored, they occupy themselves with ways they know how, and usually that involves chewing!
2. Peeing Indoors in a Trained Dog
If your dog is successfully toilet trained, and hasn't had accidents, if they're starting to pee indoors again, many people get either frustrated, or angry. If you've ruled out medical problems, and are left wondering exactly what's going on, there's a common root cause.
Fear/Dominance/Excitement/Habit
When a dog is nervous, or getting to a deeper level of fear, they can lose the ability to hold their bladders, or they do so as a submissive behaviour. These are usually smaller puddles of urine, but bigger than dribbles. Smaller dribble puddles are usually due to excitement, and a dog forgetting to withhold pee. Larger puddles near walls or edges is a territorial behaviour, and has roots in instability, or fear dominance, a sign your dog thinks he's in charge, but doesn't want to be because he's scared. If however you find your dog peeing on the same spot continually, just as if he's outside, you've fallen victim to habit! Dogs that pee indoors like this are doing so because they still smell their own pee, and want to remark that spot. If you're using any ammonia-based cleaners or cleaners that are not strong enough to mark over urine, your dog is marking over top of it because he can still smell it and believes another dog is marking in his home. It's his way of saying "Hey, this is my space, clear out!" If this is the case, a deep clean is in order - time to call in a cleaning company!
3. Whining or Yelping while Crated in a Crate Trained Dog
Typically, when a dog has been successfully trained to use a crate and has shown no issues, it can be confusing when a dog won't stop whining or yelping. This is almost always the same problem!
Too Much Energy!
If you were super excited for an awesome day at the mall, or going for a hike, would you be super happy about being stuck in a small room with no way out? Obviously not - even if that room was your bedroom or TV room. Dogs are the same way; who wants to sit in a small crate when there's a whole world out there to explore and games to play! A dog that's whining or yelping in the crate is most often suffering from too much energy - your dog needs mental and or physical exercise before you can expect them to relax in their crate!
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