English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I think I made a mistake. I recently brought home a new bulldog puppy to live with my nine year old female bulldog. She does not appear happy. I have the new puppy in the kitchen with a gate and a crate for the puppy. I have "exceptionally closely" supervised the limited interaction that I have allowed between the two. On several occasions the older dog begins to snarl and emit a low growl. I am terrified that she may try to bite the puppy. I have read some other advice where it states that I should not be too quick to jump in. Please I do not want to take chances and spend the night at the veternarian.

I am willing to listen to any helpful advice. I think I may have made a major mistake. I thought it would be a good companion for my older dog.

2006-11-12 11:45:27 · 5 answers · asked by mj32ii 1 in Pets Dogs

5 answers

Is the new pup male or female? Your AB is more likely to tolerate a male later in life, but as for now, a pup is a pup, and she should eventually "play nice" but dont count on it. She is undoubtedly feeling a bit territorial.. its been her place all this time after all. She will also establish herself as the dominate one. This isn't always a bad thing, so long as it not vicious.

Watch them CLOSELY! Let the older female be the one too initiate interaction with the pup.Dont force the pup on her, make sure she is allowed to keep a "special place" as her own. And feed her, and pet her FIRST. (this will help reassure her that she is still "queen".)

2006-11-12 11:58:00 · answer #1 · answered by think_about_this_gr8_1 3 · 1 0

Be patient. First, let the old dog go into the space where you are keeping the new dog, with the new dog not there. He can get the smells and the feel that it's still not space being taken away from him. Then let the new dog spend time aroung there right after. do this several times. Let the older dog show his dominance, the young pup will roll over and let him have his smells and all that. It will take a while. Don't make a big fuss over the new dog, that makes the older one jealous. let them take their time and I believe you will be ok. No matter what they have to work out the pecking order. The pup has to know who the boss is and once that happens and the older dog is convinced and satisfied the pup isn't competition he will settle down. Just don't force anything and allow it to move slowly at their own pace. Once the older dog growls, snaps or whatever to get the young one to stop acting like he's going to jump on him and play with him and teethe on him they will be friends.The older one know what young pups are like and believe me he doesn't want that pup all over him. He has to dominate right off the bat. Food is a fighting issue. always feed seperatly. That can cause a real fight. Don't even go there until they are really good friends. good luck.

2006-11-12 11:56:46 · answer #2 · answered by MISS-MARY 6 · 0 0

Expect the alpha dog to remain the alpha dog. Old dogs are not going to automatically accept a new dog onto the premises.

Give the older dog much affection while the two are together. If she still does not accept the new puppy, then when she growls, snarls or seems to want to attack, IMMEDIATELY roll her into a submissive position (onto her back). You need to assert yourself as dominant to her.

Don't expect this to be easy, and as a rule, a dog nine years old has no need for a companion. And the limited interaction is good, at least until the puppy can defend herself/himself.

2006-11-12 11:56:18 · answer #3 · answered by rrrevils 6 · 0 0

haha. one in all my desires is to possess and speak to an english bulldog "princess," merely with the aid of fact they seem to be opposite. yet it isn't very unique. haha. What I did for my dogs became into seek Basque names till i got here across one that acceptable him. (Xanti- named for Saint James) I even have additionally translated a character trait to a distinctive language, and caught with one that felt suitable. (Nahanie-attractive) sturdy success! I wager she is cute.

2016-10-17 05:05:03 · answer #4 · answered by mctaggart 4 · 0 0

get them together under ur supervition wile he is still a puppy later when he is bigger he could defnd him self just in case she attack him.(i doubt they do that)

2006-11-12 11:57:15 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers