Friday, January 20, 2012

Dog Barks Continuously While Owners Eat

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Dear Mr. Katz,

I have a two year-old female Boxer named Amber and a six year-old female St. Bernard named Crystal. My put a question to is regarding the Boxer, Amber. Whenever my husband and I sit down to eat dinner, peek TV, or when company comes over, she incessantly barks at us. She doesn't want to play with her toys and nothing can distract her from this barking. We try to true her in a deep tone, but she only gets crazier; i.e.. jumping up, biting our clothes. From reading your book, it seems that she needs a motivational correction, such as her training collar. As of now, we do not leave it on her, except for when she is being walked. Should she be wearing the collar when we are home and she's in the house at all times? Can you please produce any suggestions to upright this behavior so when we want to relax or have guests over, it's fine. She gets plenty of use and tons of attention. I'm not distinct what to do. Thanks in come!!

Christine

Dear Christine:

Remember the fragment on the pinch collar? And the emphasis I placed on how you will whisper your dog to become, "collar-smart" if you only spend the pinch collar during walks?

Remember the portion about consistency and how the dog MUST receive a negative association with ANY unwanted behavior? And how honest saying, "NO!" without attaching an association to the word will NOT design any results? If not, please go befriend and re-read... it's in there!

"But Adam... the dog has since eaten the book! Please objective give it to me, uninteresting and simple!"

Okay... here it is: Your dog must be wearing the pinch collar and the tab ANYTIME you are with her. If you were a canine rather than a human you wouldn't need the pinch collar as you'd fair go over to your dog and give her a nip on the neck.

Let's recap: When she barks you need to converse her, "No!" and then give a firm tug on the leash. If she continues to bark, then either:

- Your correction didn't have any meaning to her...

Or...

- She's testing to witness if you're going to lawful her for barking THIS TIME unprejudiced like you did LAST TIME. If your correction is motivational then you'll only need to do this two or three times before the pickle stops forever.

That's all for now, folks!
Adam



Dear Mr. Katz,

I have a two year-old female Boxer named Amber and a six year-old female St. Bernard named Crystal. My put a question to is regarding the Boxer, Amber. Whenever my husband and I sit down to eat dinner, peek TV, or when company comes over, she incessantly barks at us. She doesn't want to play with her toys and nothing can distract her from this barking. We try to true her in a deep tone, but she only gets crazier; i.e.. jumping up, biting our clothes. From reading your book, it seems that she needs a motivational correction, such as her training collar. As of now, we do not leave it on her, except for when she is being walked. Should she be wearing the collar when we are home and she's in the house at all times? Can you please produce any suggestions to upright this behavior so when we want to relax or have guests over, it's fine. She gets plenty of use and tons of attention. I'm not distinct what to do. Thanks in come!!

Christine

Dear Christine:

Remember the fragment on the pinch collar? And the emphasis I placed on how you will whisper your dog to become, "collar-smart" if you only spend the pinch collar during walks?

Remember the portion about consistency and how the dog MUST receive a negative association with ANY unwanted behavior? And how honest saying, "NO!" without attaching an association to the word will NOT design any results? If not, please go befriend and re-read... it's in there!

"But Adam... the dog has since eaten the book! Please objective give it to me, uninteresting and simple!"

Okay... here it is: Your dog must be wearing the pinch collar and the tab ANYTIME you are with her. If you were a canine rather than a human you wouldn't need the pinch collar as you'd fair go over to your dog and give her a nip on the neck.

Let's recap: When she barks you need to converse her, "No!" and then give a firm tug on the leash. If she continues to bark, then either:

- Your correction didn't have any meaning to her...

Or...

- She's testing to witness if you're going to lawful her for barking THIS TIME unprejudiced like you did LAST TIME. If your correction is motivational then you'll only need to do this two or three times before the pickle stops forever.

That's all for now, folks!
Adam




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