The Dog Guardian: Your Guide to a Happy, Well-Behaved Dog by Reed Nigel

The Dog Guardian: Your Guide to a Happy, Well-Behaved Dog by Reed Nigel

Author:Reed, Nigel [Reed, Nigel]
Language: eng
Format: azw3
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Published: 2017-06-14T16:00:00+00:00


Managing the home

There are often areas in the home environment where the dog acquires undesirable patterns of behaviour that can hinder the process: for example, a place where they attempt to escape or habitually bark when the guardian leaves, a room with objects they can chew, etc. These areas can be modified, blocked off or altered in order to manage the situation.

You can manage the house in many ways:

You can move objects out of reach that the dog jumps up to steal.

If you have dogs that are really small, you could put them on a lead when you anticipate problem behaviour, in order to get a hold of them if necessary.

You can cover up little crevices that the dog will hide in to escape from you.

You can put chairs on the sofa when you leave the house so the dog cannot get on top and bark out of the window at people walking past.

If your dog is chewing objects in the home every time you leave, make sure there is nothing valuable for them to chew on.

If your dog toilets in the home then put something down, or pick up the rug to limit damage.



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