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Staffy Training To Stop Our Dog Jumping When We Eat


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We have a 12 month purebred Staffy who jumps on our sliding screen door when we sit down for our evening meal every night.

Does anyone have any ideas other than tying him up ( which we do currently ) otherwise he is a well behaved boy most of the time. Thanks

:rolleyes:

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Give him a big bone or a well packed KONG toy BEFORE you sit down, and well BEFORE he starts to get excited ... then, when/if he jumps up...do NOT speak to him or even look in his direction, as this is a reward in itself.

If he is allowed indoors- you can easily have him inside, alongside you ON leash.. lying down quietly with a treat... that way he learns to be settled around mealtimes...A brilliant training opportunity!

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We had a similar problem with our GSD when we had a BBQ. Initially we locked him in the garage but this didn't really stop the problem. We ended up putting him on a short leash and put him in a drop beside me at the table. I had my foot firmly on the leash so he could not get up from the drop. When he was calm he was praised and then he was pulling etc he was ignored. Eventually he realised if he was good at the end of the BBQ he was given the left over sausages and meat (no bones) - in his bowl and away from the table. It took time and patience but he got it eventually.

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I would go with persephone's suggestion and have a yummy kong ready with his dinner when you have yours. I would tie him to the table or your chair (whichever is stronger) or crate him in the same room as you. The kong will reteach the behaviour you do want which is settle down during meal times. :rolleyes:

Mel.

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Squirt him with a water pistol when he does it. :laugh:

Good idea :rolleyes: .

We used a pop top water bottle for undesirable behaviour like that and after a very short time all I would have to do is say "ah ah" and pick a bottle up and she would stop.

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A squirt of water - how much of an aversive depends on the dog - some love it - for them it's not going to really work. For my dog, and probably many of staffy type ilk it's not as harsh as being banished from human presence (put outside or into a timeout room).

I never considered using aversives until a behaviourist reccommended the water pistol to me, and I've found it's great, it's not harsh, not scary for the dog, but just unpleasant enough to make him or her decide that indulging in inappropriate behaviour isn't worthwhile.

My assumptions are that your dog is similar to mine -

An adolescent who knows what "no" means

Assuming he's a happy, confident and outgoing dog just misbehaving because he's hoping it'll yield attention.

So here's a paraphrase of how I understood from a behaviourist why a mild aversive like a water pistol can can fix this exact behaviour - jumping on a screen door for attention:

He knows jumping at the door will result in either of 2 things - he gets the attention he wants, or nothing happens. Pretty good odds really - even if he doesn't get what he wants, he knows he loses nothing by trying so of course he's going to continue to try it - unless you give him a reason not to - a consequence - the water pistol squirt is hardly a harsh consequence, but it is effective.

Edited by Wobbly
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