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tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:29 PM
saben porque muerde tanto ay aveces ya lo quiero regalar es normal que sea asi y es un pitbull chiquito yose que son peligrosos pero ya antes habia tenido uno y los perro se comporte de la manera que tu los creces pero siento que mejor lo deveria de regalar porque muerde todo
Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:30 PM
Hola gitanita...juegas con el agresivamente?.......
Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:31 PM
de esa edad asi son los poopies.
gitana2385 wrote:saben porque muerde tanto ay aveces ya lo quiero regalar es normal que sea asi y es un pitbull chiquito yose que son peligrosos pero ya antes habia tenido uno y los perro se comporte de la manera que tu los creces pero siento que mejor lo deveria de regalar porque muerde todo

Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:32 PM
Mouthing & Nipping
For puppies, much of playtime is spent using their mouths and needle-sharp teeth to chew and investigate objects. These activities are normal, harmless puppy activities—unless you’re the object being chewed and investigated! Puppies love to play with people. They chew on their fingers and toes, and they investigate people’s bodies with their mouths and teeth. These behaviors may be considered cute when the puppy is seven weeks old, but are not nearly so endearing when the puppy is four or five months old. Although mouthing and nipping tend to diminish as the puppy matures, here are some helpful tips to get you through your pet’s teething period:
What to do:
- Substitute a toy or chew bone when the puppy tries to chew on fingers or toes.
- Puppies tend to mouth hands whenever stroked and patted. When you pat the puppy, distract him by feeding tiny pieces of treat from your other hand. This will accustom the pup to being touched without mouthing.
- Give a high-pitched yelp, as if you are in pain, when the puppy bites too hard. This should startle the puppy and cause him to stop, at least momentarily. Praise the puppy for stopping and/or for licking you.
- Time out can be effective, especially for curbing mouthing in older puppies and adolescent dogs. When you receive a hard bite, give a high-pitched yelp and (a) walk away from the puppy and ignore for 30-60 seconds, OR (b) leave the room for 30-60 seconds. Option B is only feasible if your belongings will be safe from the puppy and if the puppy will be safe left where he is.
- Encourage non-contact forms of play, such as fetch and tug-of-war, rather than wrestling and rough play.
- Provide plenty of interesting and novel toys so the puppy will be inclined to play with these.
- Provide plenty of opportunity for your dog to play with other puppies and with friendly adult dogs. It’s important that he can engage with non-human playmates.
- Be patient and understanding. Playful mouthing is normal behavior for a puppy or young dog.
What not to do:
- Avoid enticing the puppy to play by waving your fingers or toes in his face or slapping the sides of his face.
- You should not discourage the puppy from playing with you. Play builds a strong bond between the dog and his human family. The objective is to teach the puppy to play gently—not to stop play altogether. - Avoid jerking your hands or feet away from the puppy when he mouths. This encourages him to jump forward and grab at you. It’s much more effective to let your hands or feet go limp so you aren’t much “fun” for him to mouth.
- Physical punishment for playful mouthing (slapping, hitting, etc.) can make the puppy afraid of you and could even cause the mouthing to escalate into aggression. We’ve heard of various “caveman” methods such as scruff shaking, whacking the pup on the nose, sticking fingers down a pup’s throat—these are cruel and inhumane.
Bite Inhibition
Teaching a puppy to modify his mouthing behavior is an opportunity to teach him bite inhibition. Bite inhibition refers to a dog’s ability to control and inhibit the force of his mouthing. A puppy or dog who hasn’t learned bite inhibition may not recognize the sensitivity of human skin and bite too hard, even in play. Some behaviorists and trainers maintain that a dog who understands the amount of force necessary to hurt people, if ever in a situation where he does actually bite a person in a non-playful manner, will be less likely to bite and break skin.
To teach your puppy bite inhibition, first you will encourage him to play with your hands. Continue play until the puppy bites especially hard. Immediately give a high-pitched yelp and let your hand go limp. When the puppy startles and turns to look at you or looks around, remove your hand. Ignore the puppy for 10-20 seconds or, if he resumes mouthing, get up and move away for 10-20 seconds.
The next step is to return and encourage the puppy to play with you again. This is critical for teaching the puppy that if he is gentle, play continues--but if he is too rough, play stops. Play with the pup until he bites hard again and repeat the sequence. As you detect that the puppy is inhibiting those really hard bites, target slightly less painful bites. Persist with the process until the puppy can play with your hands but control the force of his bites to the extent that you feel little or no pressure at all. This can take as little as a day, or as long as a few weeks.
Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:33 PM
saludito moet creo que lo duenos de antes eran asi con el eran unos morenito ellos tienen mucho de esos perro y le gusta verlos peliar pero este perrito es como tener un bebe jaja
moet11 ha escrito:Hola gitanita...juegas con el agresivamente?.......
Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:34 PM
moet ya le fui a compar un fuckingg bone jaja y no quiere andar mordiendo otras cosas
moet11 ha escrito:Mouthing & Nipping
For puppies, much of playtime is spent using their mouths and needle-sharp teeth to chew and investigate objects. These activities are normal, harmless puppy activities—unless you’re the object being chewed and investigated! Puppies love to play with people. They chew on their fingers and toes, and they investigate people’s bodies with their mouths and teeth. These behaviors may be considered cute when the puppy is seven weeks old, but are not nearly so endearing when the puppy is four or five months old. Although mouthing and nipping tend to diminish as the puppy matures, here are some helpful tips to get you through your pet’s teething period:
What to do:
- Substitute a toy or chew bone when the puppy tries to chew on fingers or toes.
- Puppies tend to mouth hands whenever stroked and patted. When you pat the puppy, distract him by feeding tiny pieces of treat from your other hand. This will accustom the pup to being touched without mouthing.
- Give a high-pitched yelp, as if you are in pain, when the puppy bites too hard. This should startle the puppy and cause him to stop, at least momentarily. Praise the puppy for stopping and/or for licking you.
- Time out can be effective, especially for curbing mouthing in older puppies and adolescent dogs. When you receive a hard bite, give a high-pitched yelp and (a) walk away from the puppy and ignore for 30-60 seconds, OR (b) leave the room for 30-60 seconds. Option B is only feasible if your belongings will be safe from the puppy and if the puppy will be safe left where he is.
- Encourage non-contact forms of play, such as fetch and tug-of-war, rather than wrestling and rough play.
- Provide plenty of interesting and novel toys so the puppy will be inclined to play with these.
- Provide plenty of opportunity for your dog to play with other puppies and with friendly adult dogs. It’s important that he can engage with non-human playmates.
- Be patient and understanding. Playful mouthing is normal behavior for a puppy or young dog.
What not to do:
- Avoid enticing the puppy to play by waving your fingers or toes in his face or slapping the sides of his face.
- You should not discourage the puppy from playing with you. Play builds a strong bond between the dog and his human family. The objective is to teach the puppy to play gently—not to stop play altogether. - Avoid jerking your hands or feet away from the puppy when he mouths. This encourages him to jump forward and grab at you. It’s much more effective to let your hands or feet go limp so you aren’t much “fun” for him to mouth.
- Physical punishment for playful mouthing (slapping, hitting, etc.) can make the puppy afraid of you and could even cause the mouthing to escalate into aggression. We’ve heard of various “caveman” methods such as scruff shaking, whacking the pup on the nose, sticking fingers down a pup’s throat—these are cruel and inhumane.
Bite Inhibition
Teaching a puppy to modify his mouthing behavior is an opportunity to teach him bite inhibition. Bite inhibition refers to a dog’s ability to control and inhibit the force of his mouthing. A puppy or dog who hasn’t learned bite inhibition may not recognize the sensitivity of human skin and bite too hard, even in play. Some behaviorists and trainers maintain that a dog who understands the amount of force necessary to hurt people, if ever in a situation where he does actually bite a person in a non-playful manner, will be less likely to bite and break skin.
To teach your puppy bite inhibition, first you will encourage him to play with your hands. Continue play until the puppy bites especially hard. Immediately give a high-pitched yelp and let your hand go limp. When the puppy startles and turns to look at you or looks around, remove your hand. Ignore the puppy for 10-20 seconds or, if he resumes mouthing, get up and move away for 10-20 seconds.
The next step is to return and encourage the puppy to play with you again. This is critical for teaching the puppy that if he is gentle, play continues--but if he is too rough, play stops. Play with the pup until he bites hard again and repeat the sequence. As you detect that the puppy is inhibiting those really hard bites, target slightly less painful bites. Persist with the process until the puppy can play with your hands but control the force of his bites to the extent that you feel little or no pressure at all. This can take as little as a day, or as long as a few weeks.
Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:38 PM
eso me dijieron que ya despues cambia
sweetboy04 ha escrito:de esa edad asi son los poopies.
gitana2385 wrote:saben porque muerde tanto ay aveces ya lo quiero regalar es normal que sea asi y es un pitbull chiquito yose que son peligrosos pero ya antes habia tenido uno y los perro se comporte de la manera que tu los creces pero siento que mejor lo deveria de regalar porque muerde todo
Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:39 PM
Siii,es pq estan chiquito lo digo por experiencia el que tengo es una perrita pero de chiquita le gustaba morder todoooo y se kagaba por donde quiera la ca/brona esa pero poco a poco uno le va ensenando y ya no muerde nada..le tengo sus huesitos y juguetitos y hasta una cama,la ca/broncita duerme mejor que yo...se llama Xena.ya tiene 4yrs,eso si tienes que tener muchaaa panciencia.

Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:41 PM
gitana2385 ha escrito:saludito moet creo que lo duenos de antes eran asi con el eran unos morenito ellos tienen mucho de esos perro y le gusta verlos peliar pero este perrito es como tener un bebe jaja
moet11 ha escrito:Hola gitanita...juegas con el agresivamente?.......
Saludos!
el animalito lo hacen agresivos.......detesto eso de usar a los animales para peleas......tendras que ir a comprarle su juguetito![]()
Re: tengo un perrito de 6 semanas ustedes
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el 02-22-2012 05:43 PM
si sherry este es un perrito pero como jode que bueno ojala que le pase muy rapido porque quiero jugar con el y solo dice a morder y el mio se llama brownie y ya cuando quiere ir al banio avisa como que le da una lloradera y yase que quiere ir a fuera
xsherryberyx ha escrito:Siii,es pq estan chiquito lo digo por experiencia el que tengo es una perrita pero de chiquita le gustaba morder todoooo y se kagaba por donde quiera la ca/brona esa pero poco a poco uno le va ensenando y ya no muerde nada..le tengo sus huesitos y juguetitos y hasta una cama,la ca/broncita duerme mejor que yo...se llama Xena.ya tiene 4yrs,eso si tienes que tener muchaaa panciencia.
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