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Nipping…why?

Basenji Training
  • @Nilo:

    Thank you for the links, Tanza.
    Yes, the breeder is located in Florida. The name is MiBre's Basenjis. Anyone in the forum that minght be Nilo's relative?

    Who is his sire and dam?
    I believe that all of MiBre's Basenjis come from Ahmahr Basenjis?

  • Yes, Nilo's sire: Sinful's Swamp of a Legend and Dam: MiBre's Bump N The Night

  • Congratulations on your new Puppy, Nilo is lovely, what a shiny coat.Please keepus updated with how he's doing.

  • I guess I am odd, but I love my 2 b's up on the couch with me.
    They don't smell or leave a lot of hair, so they are allowed anywhere they want to go.
    Honestly they are cleaner and neater than my great niece and nephew! laugh
    Welcome. You will find lots of friends here.

  • Thank you, I am so glad you liked Nilo! I will keep you informed about him :)

  • @sharronhurlbut:

    I guess I am odd, but I love my 2 b's up on the couch with me.
    They don't smell or leave a lot of hair, so they are allowed anywhere they want to go.
    Honestly they are cleaner and neater than my great niece and nephew! laugh
    Welcome. You will find lots of friends here.

    No i don't think you are odd at all Sharon, we will be letting our Pup on the furniture, i enjoy having them cuddled up to us. The thing we will work on is training her to get off on request, this is where we came unstuck with Benji, he became quite aggresive if we tried to move him.

  • @Nilo:

    Yes, Nilo's sire: Sinful's Swamp of a Legend and Dam: MiBre's Bump N The Night

    Sire's registered name is Sinful's Swamp Legend (HP03749704)
    While the dam has been tested for Fanconi, the sire has not. The Dam is Clear, however the Sire is sired by a Carrier, so he could be a carrier and so could your pup. Now that is only important if left in-tact for breeding. But still should have been tested before breeding so that information can be given to new owners.

    And since we are trying to get all the information in the data base that is possible, it would be great if you tested your new pup.

    Here is a link to the OFA data base on your puppy's sire.
    http://www.offa.org/display.html?appnum=1146270#animal
    His hips have not been done either and his sire is a Fair, really would have been good to have him tested before breeding.

    It is good that the bitches hips were done, but it would have been nice to see the sire done before breeding. Here is the link to the Dam's OFA records
    http://www.offa.org/display.html?appnum=1146270#animal

    And about couches… ggg... we are lucky if ours let us share with them

  • @thunderbird8588:

    No i don't think you are odd at all Sharon, we will be letting our Pup on the furniture, i enjoy having them cuddled up to us. The thing we will work on is training her to get off on request, this is where we came unstuck with Benji, he became quite aggresive if we tried to move him.

    I've taught mine a command "up" to get on the couch or bed, etc., which I think helps in turn with teaching them to get off.

  • @Nemo:

    I've taught mine a command "up" to get on the couch or bed, etc., which I think helps in turn with teaching them to get off.

    Could you please let me know how do you exactly do it? Definitely I have to change my strategy, because mine it is NOT working at all…
    Thanks

  • In my opinion, you should have the dog under some control (sitting, stay) before offering the 'treat' of getting on to the couch. Of course, having treats ready for the 'sit/stay' will be a good incentive to wait until they are allowed to get up onto the couch.

  • I tell my puppy buyers before they ever get a puppy from me that I allow my dogs on the furniture which means that my puppies grow up learning it is okay to be on the furniture. I also tell them it is far harder to break a habit then it is for them to never have developed it. So if not getting on the furniture is a very important behavior for them then that is something we need to discuss.

    If the puppy is already getting on the furniture on their own and has being doing so for some time, it is going to be difficult to change the behavior. You will need to manage the situation so the puppy does not have access to the furniture unless you are able to prevent it from getting on the furniture. You will want to work separately on behaviors that are incompatible with being on the furniture like, "Go to Mat" (scroll down on this page for instructions on teaching this behavior, http://dragonflyllama.com/%20DOGS/Levels/ByLevel/2Level.html). It will take lots of consistency, reinforcement, and practice to well establish the behavior you want.

  • Thank you for the link.
    No wonder he was so confident and proud of getting up onto the couch, he had done for his entire previous life! And honestly, I did not know what you mentioned.
    One question: what if I teach him to go to his own little couch? Would he respect ours?

  • @Nilo:

    Could you please let me know how do you exactly do it? Definitely I have to change my strategy, because mine it is NOT working at all…
    Thanks

    You can lure them up at first with a treat, and teach the command pretty much like you would do sit or down. You can do the same with off the couch, by luring them off at first. I did it with a clicker though. Once they have the idea, you can do up, down, up, down, similar to a puppy push-up (sit, down, sit, down). I think the combination of commands helps…I believe I saw the approach in Jean Donaldson's "Culture Clash" but I might be wrong.

    But I do like lvoss's approach regarding place training. I'm working on that for a different reason so that the dogs stay away from the front door and don't jump all over house guests. It's useful for a number of potential issues.

  • @Nilo:

    Thank you for the link.
    No wonder he was so confident and proud of getting up onto the couch, he had done for his entire previous life! And honestly, I did not know what you mentioned.
    One question: what if I teach him to go to his own little couch? Would he respect ours?

    I'm not sure if "respect" is the appropriate word. It's more if he is allowed or not allowed, and you have to be very consistent. If you teach the dog that it can not be on the furniture, but he jumps up and someone lets him on it one time or two, then you may have to start over again. He will test you to see what his limits are. And if you aren't in the room, all bets are off, lol.

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