Photo TexxWolf |
Sure, most mammals go through a transition between
childhood and adulthood that is marked by more independence, risk taking, testing
limits and challenging authority and peers.
In both dogs and wolfdogs, the transition noted by owners is
marked as selective hearing, stubbornness, refusal to do known commands, a regression
to earlier behaviors such as mouthing, jumping, demanding barking, lapses in
housebreaking, and destructive chewing.
Owners and trainers sometimes agree that the phase is limited
to about a year and a half, with some larger breeds taking longer to mature.
But dog trainer and behavioral counselor, Jolanta Benal has
a different theory that makes sense. Benal says, “Adolescent dogs aren’t
puppies anymore. Puppies are smallish and super cute, and the result of being
smallish and super cute is that people see your behavior as harmless and sweet.
A puppy jumps up, and people say “Awwwww.” Three months later, that puppy has
spent his entire life jumping on people; he’s really good at it, and he weighs
50 pounds, so now he’s tagged an “out-of-control adolescent.”
“Or take mouthing,” she continues. “Or take mouthing. We can
and should teach young puppies to mouth chew toys instead of our arm, and to
tug at a rope toy instead of our clothes. But many people don’t know how, or
don’t know how important it is, or aren’t proactive and consistent. At 9 months
old, Mouthy Zippy is doing exactly what he did at 3 months, only now it really
freaking hurts and all your jackets are torn."
These kind of problems can really be a problem for wolfdogs
since these behaviors are often viewed as the “wolf” in the wolfdog rearing its
vicious head. And I do get really annoyed to hear trainers chalk bad behavior
up to the “wolf” side.
These behaviors also frighten people because wolfdogs grow really
fast but mature really slowly. So, Zippy’s 9 month mouthing is a bigger
issue for a 60lb wolfdog at 6 months, and again… unfortunately it's taken as a sign of the “wolf’s”
natural aggression ...BS!
As for small dogs, their puppy size and cuteness could be the reason for all their issues. After all, who can resist a paw up calming signal from a little yapper after you caught him in the middle of a little piddle. Super-sized, the puddle is less subtle, paw up or not.
As for small dogs, their puppy size and cuteness could be the reason for all their issues. After all, who can resist a paw up calming signal from a little yapper after you caught him in the middle of a little piddle. Super-sized, the puddle is less subtle, paw up or not.
However, the true culprit can be that people don’t realize training is
ongoing and doesn’t end with puppy training class graduation. Benal adds, “I’ve noticed that many people who
have trouble getting their adolescent dogs to come when called took their
puppy’s nearness for granted, meaning they didn’t purposefully practice and
reward coming to them on cue. From the dog’s point of view, a general preference
for being near her people is quite different from understanding that “Dogalini,
come!” is a signal to close the distance in a hurry right now. If you don’t
teach and reward that specific behavior, it’ll go away, like any other behavior
with little or no payoff."
So next time, you think a young animal is trying to defy you,
think again… Are you falling short on
the “goods” too soon?
See Benal's full article on the topic at Quick and Dirty Tips.com
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