Does Your Puppy Use Your Living Room Like a Jungle Gym?
My question though is regarding jumping on furniture. If myself or my husband is sitting on the couch we are obviously able to block it and make her sit and ask to come up, or just not let her come up at all if it’s not an appropriate time using the “down for manners” training. However, the difficulty we’re having is if we aren’t right there she will dive all over the furniture, run across it, dive on the kids on the couch, etc. and it is very frustrating. I’m not sure what to do to prevent that because obviously I cannot stand guard over the couch all day long. Also, once she’s up, she runs like it’s a game and will only sometimes get off when I tell her, other times I have to pick her up or grab her collar and pull her off. I’ve read in the booklet to not acknowledge bad behaviors, but that’s hard to do when she’s literally running or diving on top of the kids and scratching them and they’re crying for mommy to make her stop. Obviously I know part of it is she has some energy to get out, though sometimes she will do it even when she’s super tired (zoomies).
Any suggestions?
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Practice the directions below as many times as you can in the next few days and involve the whole family.
Pup, Pup, Puppy:
1. For no particular reason and at no particular time; begin walking to the kitchen.
2. Clap your hands and sing, “Pup, Pup, Puppy” over and over until your puppy enters the kitchen to see what all the noise is about.
3. Praise your puppy, ask him to sit and give him a food reward.
4. After several repetitions, your puppy should run enthusiastically behind you whenever you sing this and head to the kitchen for a treat.
5. Once your pup’s reaction is solid, you may begin to use this whenever you need your puppy to stop biting someone, move away from something or just grab his attention.
The Puppy routine will redirect the puppy to you in the kitchen, but you will need to do the following to have lasting results and a well-behaved dog.
Create a bedtime routine for your dog - get him to bed by 9pm!
Spend time teaching puppy to lay on the floor, not the couch by using a default down.
Make sure pup is getting lots of mental and physical exercise and attention from you during the day.
Confine the puppy when you do not want to or cannot supervise.
Teach the kids how to establish boundaries around themselves.
Teach puppy how to stay calm near the kids, no matter what they are doing.
For more help:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgYV6jA0UZ7TRra5zPu54-Q/videos
https://maggiedogtraining.com/new-products
A Sample Schedule for Your Puppy
This is a sample day that hopefully you can adjust to meet your schedule and your puppy's needs. You can change the time frames, but try to keep the daily stats the same as below for the best outcome. When puppies needs are met, they are be happy, thrive and grow and to turn into dogs that you love to be around. Each day includes the following: (1) Food -2 meals and hand-fed as rewards throughout the day. (2) Sleep. (3) House training. (4)Training, manners, learning to live in house with people. (5) Mental Exercise. (6) Physical exercise. The following schedule will meet puppy's needs within a schedule for a working person with a 9-5 job Monday thru Friday. Evenings and weekends are time to step up puppy's socialization and training time. Take your puppy in the car at least twice a week. Find a training class or a safe place for puppy to meet other dogs (Invite friends with social dogs to your house, take your pup to friends with dogs' yards). Take your pup somewhere new -a park, another walking route, a store that welcomes dogs, etc.) I recommend having the following things on hand: an appropriately sized crate, an ex-pen or gated area; 2 Kongs, a Kibble Nibble or other treat dispensing toy (s); bully sticks, cow hooves, safe dental chews, plush toys that squeak, a tug-toy, something to chase -tennis balls, Jolly Ball, frisbee, Tail Teaser; a dog bed; a water bowl which is always accessible; a collar, harness and leash; poop bags; high-quality puppy food; and some various healthy treats -boiled chicken, freeze-dried liver, etc.
Daily Schedule
6am - Wake up and take puppy outside to toilet. Deliver treat within one second of puppy eliminating. (3, 4)
6:10am - 7am Feed puppy in a gated area from a Kibble Nibble filled with dry, loose kibble and a Kong stuffed and frozen (which you prepared the night before) while you shower and prepare for work. Don't forget to wait for puppy to sit before giving him his food. (1, 4, 5)
7am- Take puppy out to toilet again. Treat when he goes. (3)
7:10-8am -Puppy is loose in house under your supervision. Spend time tossing a toy for puppy while you have coffee. Ask your puppy to come, sit and down 10 times each and reward with a treat. Ignore puppy intermittently (while still watching him!) during this time and answer emails, check phone, do dishes, etc. (4, 5)
8-8:30 -Walk puppy. Treat within one second when he eliminates. (5, 6, 3)
8:30am -12:30pm -In crate for nap and confinement when you are at work. Leave puppy with a safe chewy toy (Kong with a liver treat stuck deep inside, a bully stick, a nylabone). (2)
12:30-12-50pm -You are on lunch break or have arranged for someone to tend to your puppy. Puppy is taken outside for a 20 minute walk. Treat within one second when he eliminates. (5, 6, 3)
12:50-1:15pm: Play with puppy free in the house. Tug-of-war, Tail Teaser, toss a ball, and/or play and train with treats when puppy responds correctly. Eat your lunch while puppy if free. Take pup out one more time to toilet before you head back to work. Treat him if he goes. (6, 4, 3, 5)
1:15pm-5:15pm: In crate with a safe chew toy. (2)
5:15pm -5:30pm: Take puppy out to toilet and reward him when he goes. (3)
5:30 -6pm: In gated area with a food stuffed Kong and a Kibble Nibble. Good time for you to wind down, check in with family, and cook dinner. (1, 5)
6pm-6:30pm-free in house -play, train or love your puppy. Watch puppy for signs of needed to go out! Eat dinner. (4, 5)
6:30-7:15 - Evening exercise time: Play in the backyard, walk pup around neighborhood, take him to a local park, find empty tennis courts and let him run free, walk on the beach, etc. (3, 5, 6)
7:15 -9:30 -free in house with supervision. Watch pup for sign of needing to go out. Respond to any cues you see. Good time for a chewy like a bully stick or other safe chew. Spend 5-10 minutes training whatever pup needs -come, sit, down, on and off couch, etc. (4, 3, 5)
9:30-9:45 -short walk outside or time in yard to toilet before bed. Treat if he goes. (3, 5. 6)
9:45-10pm: Snuggle your puppy. Measure tomorrow's daily food portion and use it to load Kibble Nibble, 2 Kongs and leave the rest in a Tupperware on the counter for toileting treats and training. There should be no food remaining from the day after 9:30 pm. Prepare Kongs and pop them in the freezer for the next day.
10-6pm -In crate for the night. No chewy, no big fuss. Only attend to pup in the night if he cries out to toilet. (2)
Daily stats:
8 scheduled opportunities to toilet outside as well as appropriate supervision and confinement to assist house training.
16 hours to sleep in crate
2 scheduled feeding times and treats throughout the day for toileting and training. The feedings are completely from toys to encourage acceptable chewing, to decrease mouthiness and to provide mental stimulation and keep pup busy for longer than eating from a bowl.
Training and manners is happening all day with several specific opportunities to practice in 5-10 minute periods. Walking, sitting for toys and food, rewarding proper toileting and proper supervision and confinement all teach pup how to behave.
6 opportunities for mental exercise -eating from toys, playing with you and training time. There are also other chances to chew with also count as mental stimulation.
Three scheduled walks totally 95 minutes as well as anything else you add during pup's free time in the house with you.
8 hours a day pup is free in house, semi-confined in a gated area or is outside.
5 specific opportunities to chew appropriate items.
This is a vigorous schedule, but you have a puppy! This won't last forever. The more you rotate toys and exercise your pup physically and mentally, the easier it will be. Some of your personal goals may have to be put on hold while you raise your puppy. You may need to hire a neighbor or a dog sitter/walker to help you. Make friends with dogs and trade off sitting time. Hire a trainer for more help with anything that isn't working for you...sooner than later!
Between 4 and 6 months your pup should be able to sleep freely in your house, which will eliminate 8 hours in his crate! Between 8 months and 14 months he can be transitioned out of his crate and into the house without supervision, eliminating another 8 hours in a crate. By the time your puppy is a year, he will only need one or two good walks a day to maintain him physically. Mental exercise and training should continue throughout your dog's lifetime.