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She sleeps in our guest rest room and has alot of chew toys, big comfy bed, blanket.

2006-12-27 01:23:53 · 16 answers · asked by tru5546 1 in Pets Dogs

if you dont know much about this breed please do not answer i have been watching this dog since she was 3 weeks old and she will start obedience training when she is 9 weeks this is a tough breed to train that is why my breeder let me have her at 7 weeks by 5 weeks she had her eyes open and was walking and was not on milk

2006-12-27 02:46:33 · update #1

16 answers

She needs you to sleep with her
how cold of you to put her in a room all alone
she is a baby
How did you get a puppy at 7 weeks ...than is way too Early and who ever sold her to you should be reported

2006-12-27 01:26:42 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 4

I am not sure your breeder did you or your puppy any favors by letting her go on an early schedule. At that age, they are learning "socialization" within the litter. I'm not sure if that has anything to do with your current problem, but it seems quite possible. I think she is not quite ready to be totally alone and is a bit frightened.

If you are determined to have her sleep in a different room, I think you should think about crating her so she has a small safe space to call her own. Try to recreate as much of her litter experience as possible by making it soft and warm, etc. Play with her lots during the day, reassure her at "bedtime" . Don't scold her. Give off confident vibes, lol, when you shut the door, and greet and release her with great enthusiasm FIRST thing in YOUR morning.

Actually, most of this would work in your room too, if you can put up with a few more nights of crying... Good luck!

2006-12-27 17:11:57 · answer #2 · answered by and_y_knot 6 · 0 0

There are a few tidbits of good information here, but the gross majority of the time was spent scolding you for having a 7-week old puppy. That's really not too helpful. As a professional dog teacher/trainer, here is my advice:
1)When your pup whines and barks because it is alone, pay it ABSOLUTELY no attention. Whether you go into the room and scold it, or tell it that "everything is okay", or any response for that matter, you are doing exactly what the pup wants you to do.
2)The alarm clock idea has worked for many people. A radio playing soft music tends to have the same effect.
3)Under no circumstances allow your pup to sleep in the bed with you, or on it's own bed. This sets groundwork for dominance issues that you do not want to deal with. I know it is cute and cuddly, and makes us feel good to allow our dogs to sleep in the bed with us, but dog psychology and human psychology are two different things altogether. Consider a crate for your dog. Not only will you curtail dominance issues, but housebreaking will be much easier! You can make it very comfortable with the blanket you mentioned in your question. Trust me on this, sleeping in your bed, jumping up on you, and sitting on furniture are three things to avoid. You are in a unique position having your pup at such an early age. Take advantage of it, and you will end up with a well-behaved dog sooner than you think!

Best wishes!
WCK9
Oh, and ignore the folks here that are scolding you for taking your pup at seven weeks. As long as your pup was weaned from mom's milk, eyes open and walking around, you are probably okay.

2006-12-27 02:10:17 · answer #3 · answered by whispercreekk9 2 · 0 0

She's got too much room. Crate her if possible in something which only allows her to turn around and lay down. You can place her in your room, put an article of clothing you have worn in her box with her, and don't mind donating to the project, and the age old trick place a ticking clock inside the box or crate.
Resist the temptation to let her into bed with you unless you plan on that being a habit. (hard to break one at that)
Be prepared for a few sleep interrupted nights and know that in a very short time you can say "go to bed" and she'll hop right into her crate.
Do not put toys in her bed, it is a distraction and does not teach them that bed-time is exactly that.

2006-12-27 02:01:08 · answer #4 · answered by thankyou "iana" 6 · 1 0

She is crying because she misses her mommy and siblings. At 7 weeks, she is VERY young to be separated and you should expect her to have anxiety at night.

The best ways to combat this are with a hot water bottle, stuffed animal, and somethign that ticks like an alarm clock.

Your best bet would be to buy one of the heartbeat bears from the baby dept at a Wal-Mart or similar store. They are soft and simulate a heartbeat, so the pup will not think that she's alone.

Remember, you must be very understanding with her right now and not establish any bad behaviors in your puppy by yelling or hitting. What happens to a young pup can affect its behavior for the rest of its life!

Good luck!

2006-12-27 01:48:22 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

First, why could you have one in each of those youthful domestic dog? doggies could be with their littermates to earnings chew inhibition till after the 1st worry imprint degree which finally ends up at approx 9 weeks of age. A 7 wk previous is in basic terms beginning as much as earnings to chew and run and roll over, etc. - they grow to know their tails and paws, too. can no longer you call your breeder for help? that's considered necessary understand why your domestic dog is behaving this way. he's not vicious neither is he biting by using fact he desires to inflict harm. he's in basic terms exploring himself. the main suitable part of do is wait and notice - grab the scruff of his neck, provide it slightly shake and tell him 'no chew!' while he places his tooth on something he shouldn't. Be very consistent - however you will sense as though all you do is say 'no chew' all day long. The greater time you placed into your domestic dog now, the greater useful he would be in a protracted time. wait and notice, be consistent and issues gets greater useful. you could start up coaching him to take a seat, provide up a toy and to stroll next to you, utilizing foodstuff and an encouraging voice. determine the puppy has a lot of bite toys in any respect circumstances and be certain you have the domestic dog on a relentless schedule with sessions of quiet time in a crate (continuously have a bite toy interior the crate).

2016-10-19 00:56:04 · answer #6 · answered by merkel 4 · 0 0

For one thing, isn't 7 weeks old a bit young to be away from her mommy. She's terrified, lonely, and needs nurturing right now. This is the time to start working on how her personality will be. Just like with humans, an abandoned child will grow up acting out. There is no difference for them between positive attention and negative attention. Dogs love to do things to please their parents/families. When she receives praise for a particular behavior, she will repeat that behavior until it becomes part of who she is. These are things you want to encourage. Whatever you do, don't yell at her for crying, reward her when she feels relaxed. Soothe her when it's bed time, develop a pattern similar to what we do for our toddlers. Pretty soon she'll be ready to potty train. Schedules and patterns are very important right now. Encourage, praise, and nurture.

2006-12-27 01:33:42 · answer #7 · answered by *~*~*~~~His Angel~~~*~*~* 2 · 2 0

i had this problem to and although it seems cruel you have to leave it to cry dont go in the room at all,you may think you are comforting it but it will just think to get your attention all it has to do is cry-dogs are clever it will soon learn the crying has no effect.as she is so young a ticking clock may help to its a surrogate heartbeat.

2006-12-27 01:47:59 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

She's a puppy! (and too young to be pulled from her litter) She cries because she misses her litter mates. She will settle in. How would you feel if you were plucked from your family and then forced to sleep alone in a strange place with creatures that didn't understand you?

2006-12-27 01:31:35 · answer #9 · answered by KJ 5 · 1 1

Put lots of toys around her so she can "cuddle up" with them as she would with her litter-mates. Leave a radio on low to make her feel like she's not so alone.

2006-12-27 01:30:48 · answer #10 · answered by Yo LO! 6 · 0 1

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