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Blog & Articles
| MORE GREAT SUPPORT FROM THE MEDIA - 10/1/08 |
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| Danbury News Times |
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Friday, May 23, 2008
| From: | Bruce Caplin, JD CPDT <10minutedog@comcast.net> | | Subject: | The Garden & Your Dog | | Reply: | 10minutedog@comcast.net |
|  | The Garden
& Your Dog The Dog Doesn't Have to be the Enemy!
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| Dear
Friends: It's that time of year when we can roll up our sleeves and get our hands dirty. If you're like me,
you've been waiting for the weather to break so you can get out into the garden and start the fun work. If you're
also like me, you dread the possibility that Fido is going to trash all your hard work. Whether it's Fido's constant
digging, or eating those tasty annuals, or deciding that the best place to nap is right in the middle of your perrennial beds,
here is some advice to keep you sane. Remember, "Don't blame 'em. Train 'em."
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| Fence
the Garden This may seem obvious, but often the simplest pet managment tools are the most effective.
Keep your recalcitrant pooch out of those flower beds with a small fence. I have found that even an 18" high wire, picket
or willow fence will keep a dog out of a garden. This works for large and small dogs alike. Experiment with different heights
and styles. A fence also offers a focal point to showcase the garden.
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Know
Your Plants There are too many plants potentially toxic to dogs to list here. Here's a link to a
great site that has a comprehensive list of every plant that could adversely affect your dog.
Toxic Plants
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Add
Prickly Barrier Plants Dogs do not like to walk on surfaces that irritate their feet. Come to
think of it, neither do we. Add border plants with thorns, stickers or rough, prickly foliage such as juniper, red barberry
or a rose hedge.
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Stop
the Digging! If your ungrateful cur is digging holes in the garden, or other areas, try this: Excavate
out a 2-3" deep depression. Cut a piece of chicken wire to fit the hole and back fill the area. Dogs do not like the
feel of rubbing their pads on chicken wire and will stop digging in those areas.
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7:51 am
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ARTICLES
PUPPY & THE PACK
For thousands of years dogs have
lived in social groups called packs and each pack member has his own position or rank in the pack. Once puppies are able to walk and interact, they try to determine their position
in the litter. A puppy soon learns if he is submissive, the other puppies will push him away from the food. If he is larger and stronger than the other puppies he will most likely be the one doing
the pushing. As puppies get older they will have to figure out their position in the pack.
After a puppy is adopted into his new human pack, he has to re-establish his position. If he was the bully of the litter,
he may try to bully his new pack members. If he was submissive with his littermates, he will probably start out being submissive.
As he grows older and larger he will try to determine where he fits into this new human pack. His ultimate rank will depend
on how his human pack members respond to his actions in various situations.
When first introduced
to his new family, a puppy will usually act somewhat submissive. When greeted, your new puppy may roll over on his back and
urinate or he may squat and urinate. He is sending you a message in dog language which says, “don’t hurt me, I
am not a threat to you.” If he submits in this manner, do not scold him or you will make the problem worse.
As a puppy grows older he will take his cues on how he should respond to his new owners by the way they react
to his actions. For example, a puppy is chewing on his favorite chew toy or rawhide and a child approaches the puppy. The
puppy uses the body language he learned from his littermates to warn the child not to come any closer. These warning signs
may be a low, soft growl, a curled lip, raised hackles or a nip directed at the child. If the child heeds the warning and
backs away, this puppy has just learned that a threatening growl is a good way to keep his prized possessions away from this
particular child. The puppy also learns that his rank or position in his new family is higher than this child’s.
Sometimes children are not able to interpret a puppy’s body language and they do not back
off when warned. After several such incidents, the puppy feels he has given enough prior warning and he bites the child. Other
members of the family may not witness the earlier incidents when the puppy growled and did not bite the child. When the child
finally gets bitten, the mom or dad will often say the puppy bit the child for no reason, with no previous warning and they
may want to get rid of the puppy.
If a puppy gets away with threatening a child or younger
member of the family, he will usually try the same thing when other family members come near one of his favorite possessions.
If the family member gives the puppy a stern correction and lets him know he should never growl at humans, the puppy has just
learned that his position in the new family is lower than the family member who corrected him but still higher than the child
he threatened. Over time, similar incidents will likely occur with every member of his new human pack. The response of each
family member to the puppy’s actions will help determine his ultimate ranking. Social maturity Once he determines his family
ranking and he submits to higher-ranking family members, there may not be any more problems until he reaches his social maturity.
The best way to describe social maturity is when the puppy becomes a teenager. Social maturity usually occurs between 12-36
months of age, with 18-24 months of age being the norm. He is now older, stronger, more confident and his attitude toward
family members may change. This mild-mannered, young, adult dog may now begin to challenge higher-ranking members of his human
pack that he had previously submitted to.
The best to way assure your puppy knows his proper
position in his human pack is to begin making him earn everything he receives, as soon as he joins your family. Prior to receiving
anything such as food, petting, or play, you must make him sit to earn these privileges or rewards. By making your puppy sit,
you will teach him that he must submit to you before you will give him anything. Nothing in life is free. Everything must
be earned.
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