• I'm looking into if there's anything going on during the weekends as they are more free than a weekday with work, I don't have a yard so I also feel like he needs a good safe run, I will have to look for a dog park, I hate the idea but he needs to run!

    Him behaving badly because he's bored makes me feel like a bad mom because I doing the best I can to do it the right way for him….


  • Tucker is a little turkey when it comes to the Kong Wobbler though. He lets Becca knock it over and the treats come out then he pounces in front of here and eats the treats as they come out. Especially the last couple treats that are hard to get out.


  • Even with two, I'm running into pure boredom some days (and I confess I don't take them out QUITE as much when it's cold). I have a few tricks up my sleeves: one that always works is putting their toys plus a few treats into a loosely closed box. They take a very long time to rip the whole thing up and get to the treats and then for some reason the toys are very interesting again! That can give me quite a while to get stuff done. (I get plenty of boxes around here with amazon deliveries and so forth, so I consider it pre-recycling.)


  • I would try to get out of the mindset that he "needs to run" to combat boredom. Mine have a yard and rarely use it. When they exhibit these bored behaviors it isn't because they want to run, if that was all it was they would race around the house which they do plenty of. They want a "job" or some directed activity. That is why 10-15 minutes of working on a trick or several good challenging hides for my nosework dogs usually works wonders.

    Box puzzles are great ways to get rid of boredom. My girls love being "godzilla" and plowing through a box city to get to their treat. 10-15 boxes of varying sizes can make a wonderful playground for hiding treats. When he successfully finds the treat, step in a reward with a jackpot then hide another. You don't have to play too long and the more he has to work his brain to figure out how to get in to get the reward the more energy he will burn.


  • @lvoss:

    Box puzzles are great ways to get rid of boredom. My girls love being "godzilla" and plowing through a box city to get to their treat. 10-15 boxes of varying sizes can make a wonderful playground for hiding treats. When he successfully finds the treat, step in a reward with a jackpot then hide another. You don't have to play too long and the more he has to work his brain to figure out how to get in to get the reward the more energy he will burn.

    sounds like nosework.


  • It is but I did it with my dogs before I knew what nosework was. Now that I know about nosework, I just have a bigger collection of boxes and way more practice.


  • I have to agree with the other comments regarding mental activity, versus physical activity.

    My B acts the same way when he's bored. He's not much of a chewer anymore, but he will still run to the corner of my rug when he's bored to catch my attention. Whenever that happens, I wait a few minutes (distracting him from his behavior), make him sit (or follow another command) and then provide him with rawhide to chew on. I think it's important to distance the timing between that behavior and receiving something they enjoy, otherwise I have a feeling they will correlate the two and consistently act out.


  • I am going to try this nosework stuff. Do they just have to nudge the box to get the cookie inside or do they have to get into the box themselves?


  • When you start nosework, start with open boxes that they can get the treat themselves. Then make it harder for them to get at. For mine, I make the puzzles ones they can move the boxes themselves to get to the reward but have on occasion had to step in to help when they flip the box over and get to the reward.


  • I guess we did primative puzzle challenges with Jodi. We would play hide-and-seek, make him figure out which hand had the biscuit, or hide a biscuit in a pile of blankets. Or we would tell him get the ________", birdie, hammyster, kittycat, ect and he would run through the house to each room where the animal lived or stare outside at the fence for the cat or squirrel.

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