Disneyplanners
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2010
- Messages
- 208
I have been on the disboards for a couple of years, mostly as a lurker, and have never posted a personal question before. I decided to re-register to change my user name, as my old one had my real name in it.
Anyway this is the story: We have an 8 month old cocker spaniel puppy. Our family (myself, DH, DS7 and DS4) got her when she was ~7 weeks old. As a puppy she has been a nipper, never bad enough to hurt anyone. We've worked to eliminate that behavior, although she does "mouth" our hands still sometimes. About 2-3 months ago when she was around 5 months old, she bit my 4 year old on the cheek. The bite was not hard enough to break the skin, but his cheek got a small bruise on it. My DS4 was not bothering the dog, he was sitting next to her while she chewed on a bone, and I think he moved to get up and was bit. We looked up solutions online, and started to do things like not allow her on the couch (although admittedly we have not been completely consistent) in order to show the pup that the boys were dominant over her. Things had been going well without incident until Monday when she bit DS4 again. They were sitting beside each other (DS4 and the dog) and I think the dog went for something he had in his hand. DS4 was bit on the finger.
DH and I have since been discussing re-homeing her, but haven't decided yet what we'll do. The dog is very very sweet. She loves to be around us, loves to be pet and rolls right onto her back when she comes to us. DS7 and DS4 still love her and want to keep her, although I know DH and I have to make the best choice.
I'd love to get some opinions on this. Could professional training help break her of biting. I'm not sure the two incidents are bad enough to re-home her, but I worry about her doing it again.
Anyway this is the story: We have an 8 month old cocker spaniel puppy. Our family (myself, DH, DS7 and DS4) got her when she was ~7 weeks old. As a puppy she has been a nipper, never bad enough to hurt anyone. We've worked to eliminate that behavior, although she does "mouth" our hands still sometimes. About 2-3 months ago when she was around 5 months old, she bit my 4 year old on the cheek. The bite was not hard enough to break the skin, but his cheek got a small bruise on it. My DS4 was not bothering the dog, he was sitting next to her while she chewed on a bone, and I think he moved to get up and was bit. We looked up solutions online, and started to do things like not allow her on the couch (although admittedly we have not been completely consistent) in order to show the pup that the boys were dominant over her. Things had been going well without incident until Monday when she bit DS4 again. They were sitting beside each other (DS4 and the dog) and I think the dog went for something he had in his hand. DS4 was bit on the finger.
DH and I have since been discussing re-homeing her, but haven't decided yet what we'll do. The dog is very very sweet. She loves to be around us, loves to be pet and rolls right onto her back when she comes to us. DS7 and DS4 still love her and want to keep her, although I know DH and I have to make the best choice.
I'd love to get some opinions on this. Could professional training help break her of biting. I'm not sure the two incidents are bad enough to re-home her, but I worry about her doing it again.
) from a rehoming. They hated to do it but it was the best thing for everyone all around. They have 2 other dogs who have worked out wonderful for them but Charlie needed more attention than they could give. They tried traing with a trainer but it just didn't work. They gave it six months between the first time they mentioned it to me and when I got him.Between me and the kids he gets more attention than he wants.. does he still have some quirks? yes but not nearly as many as we got him with. No matter how much research you do into a breed there is always a chance it wont be a good match and the dog would be happier with another family.
