Not exact matches
If your pet is
calm, you should
reward his
behaviour with treats and praises.
Praise the pair for
calm interactions and use treats to
reward them for good
behaviour.
Start
rewarding for
calm behaviours and ignore all the jumping and excited ones.
Keep her near to you so she knows you are there to protect her and make sure she is not being bullied,
reward her for
calm behaviour but if it continues it may be better to leave her with some treats at home when you go visiting.
If you do go to your puppy then you will be just reinforcing the
behaviour, but if you ignore your puppy then he will soon learn that his howling doesn't get him any of your attention and when he is quiet you can then go to him and give him attention, this will help to make your puppy realise that if he is quiet and
calm then he will be
rewarded with your attention, and in turn if he is howling then he gets no attention at all.
Introduce your pet to one new situation a week and take it at his own pace using
rewards and positive re-enforcement for
calm relaxed
behaviour.
Let them meet people of all colours, children, people wearing hats, the postman, elderly people, introduce them to noises like the vacuum cleaner, hairdryer, washing machine, get them used to being handled, groomed ears checked etc and
reward them for
calm relaxed
behaviour.
It is best to ignore it and give positive
rewards (using whatever motivates the individual) for
calm behaviour.