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Author Topic: Young dogs trashing  (Read 2911 times)
Mpbarrs
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« Reply #20 on: March 20, 2014, 03:19:40 am »

Call me


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« Reply #21 on: April 02, 2014, 04:40:07 pm »

I personally love a trashy pup, they almost always turn out. I'd wait till she has a couple dozen pigs under her belt before I'd consider zapping her. Have you tried verbally disciplining her? Start at the kennels/yard, where she knows the routine. Turn her out and let her run. When she start messing with something disciplining her, yell, make it traumatic using a certain command and most importantly IMO, tone.If my dogs here "get out!" they get away from whatever they're near. You must reward her with equal if not more praise. I always talk to my dogs at the house, turn em all out and let them interact and learn my behaviors as much as I do theirs. It's worked well for grisly pups that like to think they're top dog.


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Reuben
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« Reply #22 on: April 02, 2014, 05:38:33 pm »

I personally love a trashy pup, they almost always turn out. I'd wait till she has a couple dozen pigs under her belt before I'd consider zapping her. Have you tried verbally disciplining her? Start at the kennels/yard, where she knows the routine. Turn her out and let her run. When she start messing with something disciplining her, yell, make it traumatic using a certain command and most importantly IMO, tone.If my dogs here "get out!" they get away from whatever they're near. You must reward her with equal if not more praise. I always talk to my dogs at the house, turn em all out and let them interact and learn my behaviors as much as I do theirs. It's worked well for grisly pups that like to think they're top dog.


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good post...the tone is very important as you said...they really pay attention to a deep tone...
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Training dogs is not about quantity, it's more about timing, the right situations, and proper guidance...After that it's up to the dog...
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