If the dog is still young this is a normal part of puppyhood for some puppies.
You need to completely ignore the dog not the behaviour.
You need to start working with your dog and teach it to focus on you, one way to do this is hold a treat next to your eye and say "Watch".
When your dog is about to get excited, you ask the dog to sit or put the dog into a sit and say "watch" and bring the treat next to your eye, wait 2 seconds and give the dog a treat, continue to do this, it is distracting the dog from becoming over excited.
You need to watch your dog for the signals she's about the get excited and not allow her to pass over to over excitment.
Puppies do outgrow it.
2006-12-22 23:49:36
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answer #1
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answered by Sas 3
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Well, its great that you ignore her. You have to make sure other people ignore her too. If you are outside..and someone starts to come over to see your dog...tell them nicely to stay still and wait. Ask your dog to sit and stay. When they are calm, then allow the person to come closer. As soon as the dog gets excited, start over. Consistency is the key. You can teach your dog to be calm by practicing with treats. Example.. inside, make them sit and stay. Show them a treat. Tell them to 'be nice' or 'gentle'. If the dog tries to yank the treat, pull it back and start again. Eventually the dog will learn to relax. When you come home after work, walk in, walk past the dog and pretend to ignore him. When he calmed down, bend down and greet them. DON:T ever give in! Make them sit and stay until you release them. If you are going outside...YOU walk out first...when you are ready, you can let the dog out. They must always learn to stay until you release them. This is teaching them that you are the alpha. Go to a park, practice with people. A pet store is great too because you can teach your dog to relax before allowing them to sniff another dog. You are the boss. Good luck!! Some dogs take a little time with the peeing, so be patient. My dog is now 10 months old and FINALLY learned to stop. I had another dog that peed all her life when getting excited. If nothing works, then unfortunately its another thing to get used to.
2006-12-23 03:31:05
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Ignore the dog completely. If you give the dog additional attention after she pees, she'll keep doing it. Don't scold, don't make any sound at all. As soon as you see the stream, ignore her, turn your back. Doesn't matter what she does for attention, just ignore her. Dogs will generally take any kind of attention they can get - even if it's negative. If you scold the dog when she pees during excitement, she may turn into a submissive pee'er.
2006-12-22 22:26:39
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answer #3
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answered by Kyewtie 2
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Let them outside first before u play with them are dog does the samething sometimes I think he cant help it. Just tell him he bad and go on, make sure u tell them because they will keep doing it if u do nothin we just clean it up never didnt anything, but he does it alot so I yell and tell him he bad hes got a lot better
2006-12-23 04:02:46
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answer #4
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answered by heaven 4
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A diaper.
2006-12-22 22:16:59
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answer #5
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answered by ∂ίятУ ℓάυиḋгÿ 4
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bladder removal
2006-12-22 22:17:17
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answer #6
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answered by jermdogx21523 2
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she can't help being a squirter
2006-12-22 22:18:49
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answer #7
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answered by epbr123 5
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