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

I have to get up right then to feed her or she will continue to bark and even jump on me. She only does this when it is her dinner time, according to her!!!

2007-07-19 10:17:05 · 12 answers · asked by bpsycho 1 in Pets Dogs

she does have me trained well!!! I really dont mind it, She is my pretty pretty princess. She only jumps on me if i sit there and watch her be silly!!

2007-07-19 10:28:59 · update #1

12 answers

How funny!!! MY Basset Puppy slides her empty bowl all over the kitchen floor, very noisy!!! You should discourage the jumping on you, however. If your dog does this to a child or elderly person it can cause serious injury.

2007-07-19 10:22:39 · answer #1 · answered by Darla G 5 · 5 1

I once had an elderly lady for a friend. She had a wonderful little dog. A mix of some sort. She had the dog trained well and it behaved very well. Learn here https://tr.im/7q5sH

She kept an uncovered candy dish on her coffee table with candy in it. The dog was forbidden to eat the candy. When she was in the room observing the dog he did not even appear to notice the candy. One day while she was in her dinning room she happened to look in a mirror and could see her dog in the living room. He did not know he was being watched. For several minutes he was sitting in front of the candy bowl staring at the candy. Finally he reached in and took one. He placed it on the table and stared at it, he woofed at it. He stared some more, licked his chops and PUT IT BACK in the bowl and walked away. Did he want the candy, oh yeah. Did he eat it? Nope. They can be trained that well but most, I'll admit, are not trained that well. When I was a young boy, maybe 5 years old. We had a german shepherd. He was very well trained also. My mom could leave food unattended on the table, no problem. She would open the oven door and set a pan roast beef or roast chicken on the door to cool. No problem. He would not touch it, watched or not. But butter? Whole other story. You leave a stick of butter anywhere he could reach and it was gone. He was a large shepherd so there were not many places he could not reach. Really, I think the number of dogs trained to the point they will leave food alone when not being supervised is very small indeed.
.
Now if we are talking obedience training, not food grubbing, that is a different story. Way back when I was first learning obedience training one of the final exercises was to put our dogs in a down/stay and not only leave the room but leave the building for 15 minutes. The only person that stayed was our trainer, not the owners. Most of the dogs in my class did not break their stay, which would be an automatic fail. I'm happy to report my dog was one of the ones that passed.

2016-07-18 20:00:02 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Jeez! It would not right this moment could be an ailment or ailment! Does the dogs get excercise? sufficient? 40 5 minutes an afternoon isn't sufficient, desires a minimum of an hour and a 0.5 walk and a short one interior the nighttime. If no longer, then some psychological stimulation. Border Collies at times bypass loopy, yet do no longer right this moment leap to conclusions. Get a analysis, do no longer enable people who have not examined your dogs inform you what's incorrect with it... you do no longer try this which comprise your man or woman well being issues. Take it to the vet, have it examined. and don't right this moment supply it to the safeguard. it particularly is in simple terms passing the problem on, and the undesirable dogs isn't at risk of ever come across a house, with that style of history. The dogs is meant to be a member of the kinfolk, you may not in simple terms chuck them out in the event that they reason an issue. do no longer want to be merciless, yet it particularly is how rescues are crammed up.

2016-10-09 02:23:16 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You need to get ahold of a copy of "Cesar's Way" by Cesar Millan (the Dog Whisperer). That kind of behavior by a dog is absolutely unacceptable and indicative of something you're not doing right as the dog's pack leader.

As it is, your dog somehow thinks she is the pack leader and it is trying to control you the only way it knows how: by acting out. This is actually very stressful for a dog, as she really wants and craves a strong pack leader who is stern with her. And, she is obviously not getting that from you.

Read the book. I thought I was a good dog owner until I read it. I was doing all kinds of things wrong and my dogs weren't very well behaved. Now they're awesome. And, if they step out of line, I can control them with just a gesture or a hissing sound.

2007-07-19 10:27:21 · answer #4 · answered by Paul in San Diego 7 · 0 1

She is dominating you my dog gets excited but not to that extent. Make sure before you give her food she is calm so you are not rewarding the excited behavior. Do not lwet your dog jump on you ignore her i know it sounds mean but you will thank me when you get excited with her you are influencing, telling her its ok to do that. push her off and say no or what ever word make sure she knows that she will not get attenition with that behavior. I hope this helps. Oh and if you wnat t try this i do this with my dog make her sit before you feed her tell her wait and once she waits for so long let her at. But make sure she is calm.

2007-07-19 10:58:34 · answer #5 · answered by angel 3 · 0 0

No my dog doesnt do that but that is bad behavior she thinks she is the pack leader and the boss.a big NO NO here is what you need to do before you feed her pretend that you are eating her food (pack leaders always eat first) and then give it to her.if she still jumps on you make her wait.you need to do this until shes got it down that you are the leader not her.

2007-07-19 10:58:15 · answer #6 · answered by Tornedeaus 3 · 0 0

My dog politely reminds me (comes to me and sits) to feed her if I forget. If you implement a "nothing in life is free" policy - she has to sit for food and wait 'til you release her, same with playing and petting - she will cut out this behavior.

2007-07-19 10:31:52 · answer #7 · answered by a gal and her dog 6 · 0 0

Yes absolutely.
In my case it's my cat. When he figures it time for him evening food he will sit next to me, meow constantly, and do everything he can to get my attention.
With my mom used to watch my kids after school, I would show up at 5 to pick them up and that is when the dogs would get their evening food. Now if I go over anytime in the afternoon to visit they think it is time to eat and remain underfoot until they get fed. (usually a biscuit if it is too early.).

2007-07-19 10:22:12 · answer #8 · answered by Gwen D 2 · 0 1

No only when she wants to play my dog really has a bowl and water and I dont time my dog's meal time

2007-07-19 10:19:48 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Ur dog got u!!! LOL She has set her time and she expect u too. Her way of affection that she loves u. Enjoy!!!!
Soooo cute!!
(U must have did a certain time of feedin' her so she expect it to stay that way)

2007-07-19 10:22:40 · answer #10 · answered by hillbillytweetheart 2 · 1 1

fedest.com, questions and answers