Stealing
Food & Your Personal Items
Dogs steal food for obvious reasons. The
problem is easily managed by keeping food items out of reach.
Stealing other items, however, is a more complex problem and
requires more extensive investigation before correction is
attempted.
Your
Food
Stealing food is simply eating that which is
appealing. In most problem cases, the pet has been given food
items in certain situations, and expected to ignore the same food
at other times, or a naive dog has the opportunity to take food
when the owner is not present. The simplest approach to
correcting a food stealing problem is the realistic approach.
This requires that the owner take special and basically sensible
measures to deprive the pet of the opportunity to steal food.
It also avoids the need for punishment or the more sophisticated
and time consuming methods used with puppies.
The puppy training methods may be tried if the
owner wants to make the sacrifice, but only in conjunction with the
standard rule, "Never leave food within the dog's reach."
Your Personal
Belongings
When various other items, such as shoes,
clothing, and hairbrushes are stolen, the dog is usually displaying
a lack of respect for the owner's leadership (particularly when
stealing occurs in the owner's presence), or the dog has learned
that its actions instigate an enjoyable ritual, such as a
tug-o'-war. These motivations differ somewhat from those of a
dog that takes the owner's articles and chews them when alone or
when it feels excluded from social activities.
When a lack of leadership and/or tug-o'-war are
central to the problem, the pet must be taught simple command
responses without punishment so as to reestablish the owner's
authority. All fondling of the pet must cease, as well as
tug-o'-war and other orally stimulating interaction between owner
and dog. As in the case of food stealing, any items likely to
be stolen should be kept out of reach. If the dog is caught
trying to steal something, the dog should be given commands to
Come, Sit and Stay, and praised lavishly for its responses.
The firm "get away from that" warning also helps
if followed by praise for positive response away from the
item. Yet another technique is to introduce the preamble to
some kind of treatment the dog finds obnoxious, such as get out the
nail clippers as the dog looks at the food, quickly go and start to
run the bath water, get a tissue as if preparing to clean the dog's
eyes, etc.
Written By:
Keith
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