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Puppy's bite, and actually it is an incredibly important social behavior for them. There is a reason little puppy teeth are so sharp, its so they can learn bite inhibition, before they have an adult mouth. When a puppy bites, he is learning what he can and cannot bite, how he can use his mouth and how hard he can bite. In very young puppies, I always let them mouth me. Inevitably your adult dog will put its mouth on a human, someday. If I have taught my young puppy that humans are incredibly fragile and sensitive, then they are less likely to hurt someone, in the future. Here is a you tube video with Ian Dunbar talking about this: Teaching Bite Inhibition - YouTube
I would also warn against rolling a pup, forcing it to submit, or hurting it. These things can severely damage your puppy's confidence in himself and you, not to mention damage the bond you are trying to form. If you watch dogs interact, when one rolls on its back in submission, the other dog NEVER forces it. This is done entirely by the submissive dog. If you force a dog, onto its back you are not really teaching it anything except that you are unfair in your punishment.
here are some youtube videos that offer ideas on dealing with puppy biting:
How To Train Puppy To Stop Biting! - YouTube
Stop puppies biting- clicker dog training - YouTube
there are tons of other, POSITIVE techniques that you could find on youtube and the web, as well. I am glad to see you will be attending puppy kindergarten, that is perfect!
Young puppies are very immature, they do not know what they should be doing, they only know what mother nature instilled in them and that is mostly, to explore their world with their mouth. My advice would be to trade your "Alpha rolls" and muzzle grabbing for a favorite toy and a treat pouch full of goodies and I am sure you will get a much better response. Good luck!
I would also warn against rolling a pup, forcing it to submit, or hurting it. These things can severely damage your puppy's confidence in himself and you, not to mention damage the bond you are trying to form. If you watch dogs interact, when one rolls on its back in submission, the other dog NEVER forces it. This is done entirely by the submissive dog. If you force a dog, onto its back you are not really teaching it anything except that you are unfair in your punishment.
here are some youtube videos that offer ideas on dealing with puppy biting:
How To Train Puppy To Stop Biting! - YouTube
Stop puppies biting- clicker dog training - YouTube
there are tons of other, POSITIVE techniques that you could find on youtube and the web, as well. I am glad to see you will be attending puppy kindergarten, that is perfect!
Young puppies are very immature, they do not know what they should be doing, they only know what mother nature instilled in them and that is mostly, to explore their world with their mouth. My advice would be to trade your "Alpha rolls" and muzzle grabbing for a favorite toy and a treat pouch full of goodies and I am sure you will get a much better response. Good luck!