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05-03-2013, 01:34 PM | #1 |
YorkieTalk Newbie! Join Date: May 2013 Location: Brooklyn, ny, usa
Posts: 1
| Yorkie barking and crying when we leave apartment, help!!!!!!!!! Hi everyone! We have a very big issue with our dog! Every time we leave the house she throws a fit! Barking extremely loud, crying, yelping, all kinds of loud noises. We have received numerous complaints from neighbors and even the management office. Have also started receiving warnings from the building of noise complaints and possible eviction! This needs to be fixed ASAP obviously! She is normally well behaved, listens to some commands, goes where she is supposed to go, but this issue just will not go away. She barks when we are home and she hears people in the hall but after we tell her to quite down a couple of times she stops. Here is a list of things we have tried: 1. Giving her a treat before we leave to keep her distracted. didnt work at all, she would ignore it and eat it later or eat it and start barking 2. Purchased a muzzle. it doesnt fully shut her mouth, its one of those that has a mesh bottom and is loose enough for her to pant, drink and even eat. did not help, she may not bark as loud but still whines and cries and yelps very loud 3. Purchase a collar that has a little box on bottom that sprays a mist of orange scented whatever it is when she barks. read its safe for dogs, problem with it is that after getting sprayed a few times she will still sometimes bark and the main problem is that is doesnt always go off. when shes crying or making like a yelp loud sound it doesnt go off so she still continues to make noise. So we are desperate for ideas!!! she is extremely loud and goes absolutely nuts when we leave her. During the day is one thing but when we leave for work at 7 a.m. obviously it is a major issue. From a quick search online i found two other options, 1 is removing vocal cords which is surgery and obviously sounds harsh and second is shock collar which also sounds pretty bad. Please help with ideas or proven methods. Please dont start preaching how bad shock collars are, i understand their not great and neither is surgery but neither is eviction! We are all for training but i cant imagine how to train a dog when you leave the apt and she is by herself. We are in the Brooklyn, NY area so if someone is suggesting getting a trainer to come to the house and happens to know someone local please provide info! Thank you soooo much!!! |
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05-03-2013, 02:27 PM | #2 |
♥ Love My Tibbe! ♥ Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: D/FW, Texas
Posts: 22,140
| I have used the below technique to train anxious and barking dogs how to accept being left alone without misbehaving or becoming destructive. It is long, wordy and the copy/paste from my Word program can cause some of the words to run together but you might read it over and see if it might work for your girl. It was originally posted about an adult, male dog with female owner. When enough time and repetition is used to teach this method, it has worked every time to desensitize the dog to the concept of being left alone and they learn to relax and accept this fact of their lives. But it takes a lot of dedication and repetition by the owner, working faithfully with the dog. I hope it can help your sweet dog feel less anxious when you leave her/him home alone. Separation Anxiety Most anxious dogs that aren't used to it get nervous and anxious when their owners leave the home. It is called Separation Anxiety. Firstly, take all emotion out of your leaving. Do not feel sad for him or tell him goodbye - just like pack leaders in the wild don't when they decide to go on a hunt or take a walk - they just walk away and nobody freaks. They are impersonal and matter-of-fact in how and what they must do. So no emotional goodbyes or hello's when arriving home. Act like a pack leader. Your dog is a pack animal and is genetically in tune with a firm but fair leader. As far as your actual leaving, just slowly desensitize him to your leaving and soon he will come to accept it. But you must desensitize him to it slowly and allow him to adjust to each step. Be patient with that baby - his anxiety can be overcome with time and patience and knowing what to do. Keep your training sessions short and impersonal, matter-of-fact. (You can reward him once each exercise is over with a big, loving play session and lots of loving hugs, kisses.) Give him a lovely food-stuffed kong toy, sit down and watch him playing with it, take up your keys and purse and whatever else you do as if to leave home and sit back down and just watch him. Don't go anywhere. Just sit there. Now this is key: keep repeating this for a day or two on a weekend over and over, giving him different things to chew on or play with as you get ready to go but don't. After a day or two of this, when he's playing with his kong and has accepted your getting your things together, get your keys/purse, watch him for a while then get up and without saying one word to him or looking in his direction, just like an alpha wolf who acts in its pack without question from one of his pack members, walk out of your door outside. Shut it. Stand there 10 seconds and walk back in, DO NOT NOTICE HIM AT ALL, no matter how he's dancing around your feet or whining in joy, put your things away and sit back down where you usually sit when you watch him with his kong toy. Repeat this over & over and keep increasing your times outside to let him learn slowly that though momma goes out the door, she will be back and I'm really okay. Slowly but surely as you stay out longer and longer but do come back in, he'll have grown to accept this action as inconsequential in his life and soon grow to accept your leaving without thinking a thing of it -he'll know he gets a good thing to play with and some good food, momma will be back and he'll accept it. B4 long, he will just accept your leaving without any toys or kongs or anything. After a while, include getting in the car in this training exercise, even starting it up and getting right back out and coming in the house without noticing him. Repeat repeat repeat - sitting in the car awhile with it running. Eventually, drive around the block and then back home, inside, not noticing your dog and putting your things away, coming to sit in the same place on the couch where you always sit during this training. Once you have sat there a while after each training session, now it is time to play and reward that anxious baby who is learning to be a goooood dog so now have a blast with him. Lots of love, hugs, kisses, tugowar, etc. Happy, happy rewards for his efforts are definitely in order! If you are patient enough to do this, it works EVERY SINGLE time and turns an anxious, crying dog into one that accepts leaving as just a part of his day.They soon learn to adjust their day to sleep while we are away and be ready togo when we get home. I would also start him on a good positive-rewards training program such as in Tamar Geller's The Loved Dog book. This will teach him to bond well with you as you develop a strong relationship that he will not question, no matter what as he knows momma is always gonna keep it fun, loving and always rewarding for him.
__________________ Jeanie and Tibbe One must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. C. S. Lewis |
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bark, barking, home alone, leaving, trainers |
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