Cooper will officially be a year old in 3 more days. Usually by now most Dogs are done teething, Cooper still does. One of the biggest issues is biting when we have socks on. If anyone, whether it be a guest or family walks around him with socks on he will bite our feet non stop. If we dont wear socks he wont even touch our feet. We've tried saying NO!, not paying attention, and using a penny jar. Neither of those solutions work. Also If i just sit down to pet him he will be fine, slowly he gets more excited, and will begin biting my hands while yipping at me. We have tried a lot of things but none seem to work. it has faded, before all he would do is bite me, now he does it after a little time just petting him. Will this Problem fade away? or do we need to work at getting rid of it because this is a large nuisance to guests, he will just bite their feet and sometimes take the socks off and run away with it.
Any thoughts or response would help
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Biting socks and hands is not teething IMO, it's just an undesirable behavior. Has he been through any obedience classes? At a year old I don't think these are things that will go away on their own.
What I would do is when he starts biting your feet give him a strong NO and stop moving immediately. Eventually he will lose interest, but it may take a long time, you need to be patient and consistent. If he starts getting crazy about it I'd say NO and then TIME OUT and put him in an xpen or puppy safe room with the door closed for 10 minutes.
For the biting while you're petting him, I would just stop petting and ignore him completely the moment he starts to bite or yip or get excited. Get up and walk away if you have to. Eventually he will figure out that if he wants pets he needs to sit still and be calm. Some dogs just don't like to be pet though, so I wouldn't push it on him if he doesn't seem to enjoy it.
Jane, I did not mean to imply that a time out may not be useful. It works well to calm dogs that have become over excited or over stimulated, especially true of pups and young energetic dogs. If they calm down, they will then again be able to listen and respond better to you. What I do think is that learning ultimately requires being IN the situation and offering a different behavior, so that true learning only takes place IN the situation.
If Daniel is getting the pup overexcited, or rough housing etc. a time out will help the pup and, in that case, it's for Daniel to learn the pup's limits and not push him beyond them.... In training the aim is always to help the dog be successful.
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