Many puppy books tell you to
never let your puppy out if they have been crying, or while they're too excited, because this will just teach them to cry every time they want to be let out.
As Cesar points
out, a
puppy's canine mother — the ultimate «pack leader» and the example you should keep in mind — would
never let one of her pups aggressively jump on her when she didn't invite it, or be aggressive with another grown animal.
I really care about the
puppy and want to make it work, the last thing I would ever want to do is adopt a
puppy only to return it, but I do not want this to negatively affect Stella.We have done all we can to
let Stella know that Macy will
never take her place.We
never scold her if and when she growls or barks at Macy, we always greet her and feed her first, we correct Macy if she tries to bark at or growl at Stella.We have separate sleeping places for them.I don \» t know at what point I say, \» this is not working
out \» and take the
puppy back.