- Location
- Herefordshire, UK
@Natalie , the trainer advised me to have one hand at an angle of 45 degrees to the ground, palm towards the dog and with your other hand quickly fire treats over the top onto the ground. I hope that makes sense, I'll ask my son or daughter to video me doing it if I remember.
The idea is that your hand is asking them to respect your space and the food encourages the dog to focus on the ground. I can honestly say that it worked like a charm and she quickly stopped mouthing me. She was older than Bear mind you, no longer a puppy, but what was happening was that she would do so in greeting, if we'd been separated at all, and she would actually nip me and it hurt! I'm sure it was because I didn't handle her puppy nipping of me very well and waited for her to outgrow that behaviour, rather than addressing it, so didn't learn it wasn't ok.
She will still occasionally pick up my arm or pull my sleeve if she wants something, like breakfast or for me to go and sit by the fire with her, but that's ok because she's very gentle now.
The idea is that your hand is asking them to respect your space and the food encourages the dog to focus on the ground. I can honestly say that it worked like a charm and she quickly stopped mouthing me. She was older than Bear mind you, no longer a puppy, but what was happening was that she would do so in greeting, if we'd been separated at all, and she would actually nip me and it hurt! I'm sure it was because I didn't handle her puppy nipping of me very well and waited for her to outgrow that behaviour, rather than addressing it, so didn't learn it wasn't ok.
She will still occasionally pick up my arm or pull my sleeve if she wants something, like breakfast or for me to go and sit by the fire with her, but that's ok because she's very gentle now.
