Hi All,
I have to disagree with this comment:
"I absolutely agree with Vilma -- dogs do not seek revenge or act out to "get
back" at us -- those are human activities."
My female Tibetan Mastiff is definitely the classic TM, aloof, independent and full of
herself. She was a breeze to housetrain a
When I was a teenager,our Siberian ,Ditka, began to pee on my parents bed.
She was about 10yrs old, and only did this in front of them.It seemed so
obvious she was trying to tell us something as sometimes ,the minute they
walked in the door, she would actually lead them to the bedroom and pee on
Personally, I dont believe dogs think "screw you" when they do things like
thisthey are much too simple and pure to be so devious and "plan
revenge." They just do what feels good, what they see as in their best
interest.
They do commonly suffer from seperation anxiety, however, which can
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Bernese Mountain Dog Mailing List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: peeing on the bed
Date: Sun, 3 Nov 2002 06:26:34 -0800
Hi -- I didn't get the original post on this (just some of the replies)
becuse I get the digest and it's often truncated. So I
Hi -- I didn't get the original post on this (just some of the replies)
becuse I get the digest and it's often truncated. So I don't know all the
circumstances, but I do have one comment: my Maggie peed on the bed once --
though she was a fujjlly-grown dog at the time -- but she did it *in her
slee
Try just keeping her away from the bed (close the bedroom door or babygate
the entrance) for a couple months if that is the only place in the house your
youngster urinates. Of course greatly rewarrd her when she goes in the
"right" place (outside) w/ enthusiastic praise and perhaps a tidbit. T