Sorry for one error, I didn't catch that he went on the puppy pad the first
time I read your post, I thought he just went on the floor in front of you,
which some dogs will do to show dominance. Gigi was big on eating her poop
too, but her reason comes from being a backyard breeder living in a  cage
for most of her life. Usually it is a learned behavior from the mother dog
who wants to keep her pups and cage clean when they are in a bad breeding
environment. The other reason is that the mother dog isn't getting enough
food or cheap food and she feels that she is missing something. The pups
watch this behavior and mimic it.

 I rescued Gigi over a year ago, and had to constantly monitor her and as
soon as she would go to eat it, I would say leave-it and when she did always
told her she is such a girl, and gave her a treat instead.  Now she rarely
does it anymore. Lots of pups are known to like tootsie rolls, so it is not
unusual. Just try to monitor his bathroom habits and and give the command
before he touches it and a treat when he listens and in time he should get
over it.  



 
 
 
 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: Peggy & The Girls
Date: 1/12/2012 7:07:10 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] our new puppy
 
I have found that teaching them the ''drop-it'' and ''leave-it command'' to
be invaluable. It also teaches them not to be possessive when they have
something special in their mouth. Just teaching them 'drop-it' and then
remove the object puts you in charge and if they should immediately go to
pick it up again before you can retrieve it say ''leave-it'',  sharply, and
they learn that again you are the alpha and growling is unacceptable. 
 
My Gigi is a garbage truck when it comes to food, and more then once on
walks she went to pick up something, but just before she got it in her mouth
 I would say ''leave-it'' and she does. If you don't know the correct way to
teach these commands, I will gladly post it. Both my girls learned them in
one session, within minutes, and it works every time.
 
I sincerely doubt your reprimanding him caused him to poop. The truth is, he
was marking territory and again trying to show dominance. Chi's can have a
very forceful and pushy personality and aren't afraid of anything. They are
known for confronting huge dogs, just to display there courage, and
authority. Since yours is a puppy, it is best to get him out of any bad
behaviors before he gets any older. I would dedicate 15-20 minutes per day
twice a day, to the basic commands of sit, down, stay, come, off, drop-it,
leave-it, and keep up with the schedule until he has it down pat. I would do
the training after he does he business, but before he eats. Puppies catch on
really fast, if you use the reward and ignore method. Reward him with a
treat and lots of ''good doggie'', when he does what you want, and ignore
his negative behavior during training. Never use the word 'No' when he doesn
t do exactly what you want, but ignore it for a minute or two and then give
the command again. It is a very stressless method for both the dog and the
owner, and the dogs really get the hang of it quite fast.
 

 
 
 
 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: Megan
Date: 1/12/2012 12:00:18 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Chihuahuas] our new puppy
 
  
Hi group!
My husband and I just got a 6 month old black&white long coated male named
Valkan. He is just adorable. This is really the first chi (or even small
dog) we've ever had - aside from the year we had our daughters 5 yr. old chi
living with us. I feel like I am totally clueless as to training him. We
have a herd of alpacas and 4 big livestock guard dogs (who are also hard to
train) so I'm used to being the alpha but I'm very happy to find this group!
We got Valkan from a wonderful breeder who believed that even show dogs are
pets first, so he has been crate and ex-pen trained but I feel so clueless
in some respects with this little guy that I'm feeling guilty about calling
her so much!
So - thank you all for being here!
Here's my situation for today...any input as to the best way to deal with
this would be really appreciated.
Today, while sitting on the couch next to me, chewing on his rawhide stick,
he growled and tried to bite me when I got too close to the chew. He'd done
this once before so I was testing him. Obviously, this is totally
unacceptable behaviour so I put him on the floor without the chew. Worked on
this for awhile until he was behaving better. After this he pooped on his
puppy pad and started to eat it...which he hasn't ever done. He's demolished
the chewstick in a very short period of time this morning and the poop thing
makes me wonder if I went a little too far timewise and stressed him out..
or is he teething? or what?

He is just adorable and I love him and want him to be well behaved but I
really don't know what works best for chihuahuas.
Thanks.

Megan Burleson


 
 

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