Similarly, I've worked
on dogs with separation anxiety, compulsive behaviors, fear biting problems, aggression problems (aggression isn't the same as fear biting), dominance problems, and so on.
Not exact matches
About Blog I'm a veterinarian and professional
dog trainer,
with a focus
on treating behavior problems including aggression,
separation anxiety, and compulsive behavior issues.
Some of the challenges we worked
on together included housebreaking, mouthing issues, obedience commands,
separation anxiety and his interactions
with our other
dogs.
Included in the course are consultations
with real
dog owners
with advice
on nipping, chewing, excessive barking and
separation anxiety which are all common issues
with Sheltie puppies.
Activities such as leaving the radio
on, not making a big deal of departure or arrival or leaving mental stimulating toys will assist
with your
dog's
separation anxiety.
It's important to realize that there is a critical difference between
dogs with truly abnormal behavior issues (inappropriate aggression or reactivity,
separation anxiety, thunderstorm or noise phobias, etc.) and
dogs who have training problems like jumping
on people or not coming when called.
Living
with Sierra, a shelter
dog who came
with a deeply entrenched case of
separation anxiety, has given Nicole an insider's perspective
on separation issues and has emphasized the fact that a cookie - cutter approach does not work for every
dog.
When working
with treats whether it is a training tool or for management of issues such as
separation anxiety, keep a keen eye
on your
dog's weight.
Vocabulary Elimination Training Teaching Contented Kennel Confinement Teaching Positive Chewing Puppy Play Biting Rewards and Corrections Leadership Through Learn to Earn - SAMPLE Leadership Exercises Using Food as a Training Tool Puppy Proofing the Home Early Socialization Socialization Check List Socialization Classes Teaching «Sit» Teaching «Stay» Teaching «Come» Teaching «Easy» Teaching «Let's Go» Teaching «Off» Pass the Puppy Party Suspension Gentling Exercises Advanced Gentling Child Safety Children Introduced to
Dogs Children Relating to
Dogs House Rules Household Manners Close Tether Training Rawhide Chews Toys Leashes and Collars Head Collars Leash Walking Preventing
Separation Anxiety Preventing Aggression Toward Family Members Preventing Household Destruction Preventing Jumping
on People Preventing Destructive Play Preventing Food Bowl Aggression Preventing Excessive Barking Preventing Excessive Whining Preventing Excessive Licking of People Preventing Excessive Urine Marking Preventing Aggressive Play Traveling and Waiting in the Car Jogging
With Dogs Waiting at Curbs Spaying and Neutering Identification Food and Water Nutrition and Behavior Bathing Gentle Grooming Nail Trimming Nail Trim First Aide Teeth Brushing Teething
If you and your
dog are having issues
with their
separation anxiety, call me at 800-649-7297 or we'll get you and your
dog started
on the path to success immediately
with our
dog training programs!
Better information allows us to not make those same mistakes, whether we are talking about a
dog with fear issues, a
dog who doesn't like to be hugged, educating children
on how to properly interact
with dogs and understanding
anxiety issues, including
separation anxiety, and how to treat them.
And, when
dogs with separation anxiety do such things as bark, chew up the doorframe, and pee
on the rug, it can be easy to jump to the conclusion that they are behaving out of spite or are just being naughty — but they are not.
Another way we can use exercise to help a
dog with separation anxiety relates to the effects exercise has
on anxiety itself.
Getting a qualified professional
on your team to resolve your
dog's
separation anxiety is an investment, one that is well worth the end result: a
dog who can cope comfortably
with being home alone, and a far happier and better quality of life for him and for you.
Although a certain amount of sadness and upset behavior
on the part of your
dog when you leave is normal, a
dog with separation anxiety is usually inconsolable and will act out
with inappropriate behavior.
I have a small
dog with separation anxiety and I've had him
on these for about two weeks now
with absolutely no results.
She has attended seminars of internationally recognized presenters such as Patricia McConnell, PhD; Debbie Martin, RVT, VTS, CPDT - KA, KPA - CTP
on assisting
dogs with deep
Separation Anxiety; Grisha Stewart's Behavior Adjustment Training for Aggression, Frustration and Fear; and the powerful program
on Understanding and Preventing Canine Aggression by Julie Shaw of Purdue University Animal Behavior Clinic.
Erica has worked
with hundreds of
dogs and their human families
on issues ranging from house training and basics to reactivity, aggression,
separation anxiety, and other behavioral concerns.
Past topics include: Making environmental cues work for you Puppy socialization Addressing unwanted behaviors
Separation anxiety Integrating a new
dog with other pets «Disobedience» Pulling towards other
dogs Fearful
dogs Capitalizing
on informal behaviors Training your
dog with affection Multipurpose cues Creating reliable cues Importance of fundamentals When «sit» doesn't happen Crate training your
dog How to split a sit The problem
with «ignoring» Training
with the Grain Positive reinforcement: turning the world into a treat Learning what predicts what It depends: Why
dog training «tips» often fail Teach your
dog to wait at doors Teaching When, Where, and Why Redirect or Preempt?
If you've adopted a
dog straight from a hoarding situation, you may want to seek the help of a professional canine rehabilitation specialist or positive reinforcement trainer who can work
with you and your
dog on individual issues like
separation anxiety or submissive urination.
While Thundershirt will usually reduce
anxieties in
dogs just by putting it
on, in severe cases of
separation anxiety, it is recommended to use Thundershirt in conjunction
with a training program.
I have a current customer who has been working
with me
on her
dog's
Separation Anxiety for nearly 3 months.
Dogs with anxiety (including
separation anxiety), aggression, or obsessive compulsive tendencies (like excessive licking, pawing, or chewing) do very well
on a Zoloft regimen.
Dogs with more severe
separation anxiety may chew
on walls, furniture, or carpeting when the owner is away.
For tips
on how to help your
dog with separation anxiety, read this article: http://www.akc.org/content/
dog-training/articles/
separation-
anxiety-in-dogs/
On a side note — I'd like to share that I also use Matricalm
with success for
separation anxiety in
dogs and inappropriate urinations in cats.
She has attended seminars of internationally recognized presenters such as Patricia McConnell, PhD, Debbie Martin, RVT, VTS, CPDT - KA, KPA - CTP
on assisting
dogs with deep
Separation Anxiety, Grisha Stewart
on Behavior Adjustment Training for Aggression, Frustration & Fear, and the powerful program
on Understanding and Preventing Canine Aggression by Julie Shaw of Purdue University Animal Behavior Clinic.
Most
dogs with separation anxiety can be helped through behaviour modification
on the part of the owner.
Some
dogs with separation anxiety chew
on objects, door frames or window sills, dig at doors and doorways, or destroy household objects when left alone or separated from their guardians.
For
dogs with separation anxiety, counterconditioning focuses
on developing an association between being alone and good things, like delicious food.
Babies and
Dogs Barking Bite Prevention Breeds for Different Lifestyles Breed Selection Canine Cough Chewing Clicker Training
with Puppies Conditioning the Canine Athlete Crate Training Digging House Soiling House Training How Dogs Learn Hyperactivity Jumping Up Managing a Multiple Dog Household Play and Exercise Problem Prevention Pulling on the Leash Puppy Socialization Reasons to Spay and Neuter Relocating With Your Pet Senior Dogs Separation Anxiety Stealing Summer Pet Tips Training a Reliable Recall Traveling With Your
with Puppies Conditioning the Canine Athlete Crate Training Digging House Soiling House Training How
Dogs Learn Hyperactivity Jumping Up Managing a Multiple
Dog Household Play and Exercise Problem Prevention Pulling
on the Leash Puppy Socialization Reasons to Spay and Neuter Relocating
With Your Pet Senior Dogs Separation Anxiety Stealing Summer Pet Tips Training a Reliable Recall Traveling With Your
With Your Pet Senior
Dogs Separation Anxiety Stealing Summer Pet Tips Training a Reliable Recall Traveling
With Your
With Your Pet
On rare occasions, a
dog with mild
separation anxiety might benefit from drug therapy alone, without accompanying behavior modification.
Most how - to articles
on separation anxiety advise leaving a long - lasting food item
with the
dog during absence rehearsals.
This resource helps
with adopted puppy mill rescue
dogs, including advice
on crate - and house - training, socialization,
separation anxiety, gaining trust and more.
Dogs with separation anxiety can harm themselves in a state of panic, not to mention it can have a massive impact
on their quality of life.
Chewing, Digging and Destruction Some
dogs with separation anxiety chew
on objects, door frames or window sills, dig at doors and doorways, or destroy household objects when left alone or separated from their guardians.
Manners for the Modern
Dog contains down - to - earth advice on how best to communicate with your dog and solve common behavioral complaints such as housetraining, chewing, barking, digging, jumping, separation anxiety and much mo
Dog contains down - to - earth advice
on how best to communicate
with your
dog and solve common behavioral complaints such as housetraining, chewing, barking, digging, jumping, separation anxiety and much mo
dog and solve common behavioral complaints such as housetraining, chewing, barking, digging, jumping,
separation anxiety and much more.
My first foster
dog struggled
with separation anxiety, an issue that required patience and work
on a day - to - day basis.
Clear, step - by - step instructions
on how to deal
with common problems that make living
with your adopted
dog a challenge, such as housetraining,
separation anxiety, hyperactivity, shyness and fearful behaviors, aggression, barking, chewing and digging.
There are so many things, as pet parents, that we have to worry about: rising obesity rates; rising cancer rates; digestive issues; inflammatory conditions like Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Arthritis; diabetes; allergies, both to food and the environment; skin conditions; training challenges; anxious
dogs or
dogs with separation anxiety; low quality commercially processed
dog food; food that will possibly make our
dogs sick due to contaminated ingredients; and the list goes
on!!
Today, I want to delve a bit deeper into what we can do to help
dogs with separation anxiety — including some details
on what strategies worked well for our boy Duncan, many years ago.
If your best friend was suffering from extreme depression — she's unable to work, she's not eating, she's crying nonstop — and you knew that she could begin feeling better much more quickly if she took medication while undergoing therapy, would you want her to wait a few months to see if the therapy could get the job done
on its own?I've seen so many
dogs feel better sooner and overcome their
separation anxiety much faster
with medications, so when I discovered that my Tini had
separation anxiety, I worked
with my vet to find the right medication for her while I trained her.
Dogs that escaped back yards because the pool guy left the door open (I wouldn't want to be a pool guy with that on my conscience); dogs that escaped because of fireworks; dogs that escaped because of untreated separation anxiety; dogs that escaped because the dog got loose from the owner and the dog wasn't obedience trained and wouldn't come back; dogs that were snatched from back yards by predators; dogs lost on vacations; e
Dogs that escaped back yards because the pool guy left the door open (I wouldn't want to be a pool guy
with that
on my conscience);
dogs that escaped because of fireworks; dogs that escaped because of untreated separation anxiety; dogs that escaped because the dog got loose from the owner and the dog wasn't obedience trained and wouldn't come back; dogs that were snatched from back yards by predators; dogs lost on vacations; e
dogs that escaped because of fireworks;
dogs that escaped because of untreated separation anxiety; dogs that escaped because the dog got loose from the owner and the dog wasn't obedience trained and wouldn't come back; dogs that were snatched from back yards by predators; dogs lost on vacations; e
dogs that escaped because of untreated
separation anxiety;
dogs that escaped because the dog got loose from the owner and the dog wasn't obedience trained and wouldn't come back; dogs that were snatched from back yards by predators; dogs lost on vacations; e
dogs that escaped because the
dog got loose from the owner and the
dog wasn't obedience trained and wouldn't come back;
dogs that were snatched from back yards by predators; dogs lost on vacations; e
dogs that were snatched from back yards by predators;
dogs lost on vacations; e
dogs lost
on vacations; etc..
Came
with food aggression, fear of men, fear of people of color, and
separation anxiety... 5 years later and you can now add
on fearfulness and aggression towards small
dogs, children, and pretty much everything... Nothing has worked to fix this
dog, and I've about lost it, we can't find a place to stay for more than a few months cause of her issues.
Posted in Awareness / PR, Behavior Comments Off
on When They Love a Little Too Much — Hope for
Dogs with Separation Anxiety
On occasion I was asked if all this was worth it, and it was a surprisingly easy answer when I imagined the life of a
dog with separation anxiety: imagine your worst phobia, your absolute worst, one you would jump through a glass window or tear down a door to escape from, one that could make you scream for hours or throw up in fear, and then imagine facing it for ten hours daily.
Down - to - earth advice
on how best to communicate
with your
dog and solve common behavioral complaints such as housetraining, chewing, barking, digging, jumping,
separation anxiety and much more!
About Blog I'm a veterinarian and professional
dog trainer,
with a focus
on treating behavior problems including aggression,
separation anxiety, and compulsive behavior issues.
About Blog I'm a veterinarian and professional
dog trainer,
with a focus
on treating behavior problems including aggression,
separation anxiety, and compulsive behavior issues.