Dare we hope ?

Hi everyone... so the biting thing... it will pass?! Betty is 12 weeks tomorrow and a biter. Not all the time but I am always a bit conscious that she could snap. Sometimes she can look really annoyed (usually in the evening) with her ears back, eyes starring at me and she follows me around snapping at my legs! I usually just step over the stairgate and ignore her but sometimes I pop her in her crate to calm down if I need to get on in the kitchen. She also bites visitors after initial friendliness! Is this all normal? I have actually googled - is my labrador puppy aggressive - as she honestly is quite scary when is this biting mood. But she is my first dog so I am inexperienced! Any thoughts very much appreciated - so glad I found this site!
 
Well , so far so good ! Yes , he does still have the odd bite , usually when he is excited , but if I ask him to sit , then gently touch his nose with the palm of my hand and then immediately smooth behind his ears , he stops ! Its nowhere near as bad as it was though , long may it last x
@kateincornwall I think Betty's is a week younger than Reuben (DOB 21st Sep) so I hope that she too stops biting so much in a weeks time!
 
She's perfectly normal some are worse than others. It often appears when they are over tired. She's just being a lab pup always have a toy handy to distract the teeth from you walk away or do like you have been and put her down for a rest in her crate. It's does pass.
They need to learn the difference between greeting a pup and a human.
 
Yes, distraction or momentary isolation is the best way to deal with these biting monsters ! My last Labrador Sam never did it but the girl I had before him was a shocker , it does pass , thank goodness ! I have a saying , Keep the Faith , I keep repeating it like a mantra ! x
 

HAH

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Hi @lilliput - this is soooo normal! Our pup Kipper (now 14 months) is our first too, and the whole mouthing and biting world was a bit of a shocker :eek:
I think the thing that really helped me was realising that they explore so much of their world with their mouths, and part of that for them is learning how to explore with their mouths.
As @SwampDonkey and @kateincornwall say, tiredness makes it worse (I think they find it harder to gauge what’s too much!) but it will get better, we promise :) in the meantime it’s all about managing, and it sounds like you’re doing pretty well (y) it’s definitely not aggression - more like over-arousal.
 
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