Consejos rápidos para los problemas de conducta más comunes

Recursos

/

/

/

Consejos rápidos para los problemas de conducta más comunes

Índice

    Consejos rápidos para los problemas de conducta más comunes

    Got some tricky behaviors popping up? This article breaks down common challenges into simple, easy-to-try strategies so you can address them with patience, consistency and plenty of positive reinforcement. For more troubleshooting tips, check out Cinco pasos para resolver problemas de conducta.

    Challenge: Indoor Accidents

    Undesired Behavior: Your dog pees on the carpet.

    Quick solution: Keep your dog off the carpet unless you know they have emptied their bladder and they are supervised.

    Tips: Use doors or baby gates to keep your dog in an acceptable bathroom area or use a crate to confine your dog. Reward your dog for going potty in the right place.

    Training Resources: Housetraining 101Cachorros: Adiestramiento para ir al baño 

    Challenge: Chewing

    Undesired Behavior: Your dog chews inappropriate items (remotes, wallets, shoes, socks, kid's toys, the mail, etc.).

    Quick solution: Put loose objects out of your dog's reach, such as on a high shelf, in a cabinet or closet or in a room closed off by a door or baby gate.

    Tips: Provide dog toys they enjoy and praise your dog for chewing on them.

    Training Resources: Destructive ChewingEnrichment ResourcesCalm Behavior at Home

    Challenge: Barking

    Undesired Behavior: Your dog barks at people passing by the house.

    Quick solution: Prevent your dog from seeing or hearing people outside.

    Tips: Shut the curtains. Move the couch away from the window. Install window cling film on the lower half of your windows to lower visibility. Keep your dog in a designated quiet space or pen for short absences from the home. Use treats to redirect your dog away when they begin barking at people and reward calm behaviors.

    Training ResourcesCalm Behavior at Home

    Challenge: Leash Pulling

    Undesired Behavior: Your dog pulls on the leash.

    Quick solution: Use a front-clip harness (sense-ation harnessfreedom no-pull harnesseasy walk harness).

    Tips: Train your dog to walk on a loose leash by rewarding any leash slack or check-ins, stop walking when they pull, and continue walking when they look back or loosen leash slack.

    Training Resources: Leash HandlingLoose Leash WalkingB&T Lecture: Success on LeashBasic Training Classes

    Challenge: "Attacking" Household Items

    Undesired Behavior: Your dog "attacks" the lawn mower, water hose, vacuum cleaner or other household items.

    Quick solution: Put your dog in another part of the home before using the item.

    Tips: Desensitize your dog to the item and help them create a more positive association with it by pairing low-intensity exposure to the item with treats. This training must be done when your dog is calm, otherwise their fear of the item could intensify. Slowly (over many sessions) increase the intensity of the exposure, rewarding your dog when they remain calm.

    Training Resources: Acondicionamiento de contadoresImpulse Control, Overstimulation, DSCC & Choice PlaylistDecreasing Fear of Loud Noises, Desensitization & Counter ConditioningCalm Behavior at HomeRecursos para mascotas bien socializadas

    Challenge: Digging

    Undesired Behavior: Your dog digs up the yard or garden or lies in the flower beds.

    Quick solution: Put a low but sturdy fence around landscaped areas. Keep your dog on leash or supervise your dog when they are in the yard.

    Tips: If your dog loves to dig, provide a sandbox with occasional buried treats or toys. The sand will be cleaner than dirt, and your dog will be rewarded for satisfying their digging urge in an area of your choice. Or provide ball pits y foraging enrichment. Make sure your dog is cool enough (in summer) and warm enough (in winter), as digging can be a method of heat control. Teach "leave it" for times when your dog is digging where they shouldn't be, or getting into something unsafe.

    Training Resources: Recursos de enriquecimientoEnriquecimiento: Juegos cerebrales para la salud mentalClases de trabajo de nariz K9

    Challenge: Furniture

    Undesired Behavior: Your dog gets on the furniture.

    Quick solution: Keep your dog out of that room when unsupervised. Turn the chair against a wall or upend it. Set up baby gates or exercise pens or place boxes or other objects on furniture to prevent your dog from accessing the furniture.

    Tips: Consider putting a blanket or sheet over the furniture and allowing the dog to enjoy its comfort. The cover can be easily removed and cleaned. Or, offer them a dog bed, mat or crate as an alternative place for them to relax. You can make this a training exercise by teaching them to go to a mat on cue.

    Training Resources: Stationing on a matLa calma se instala

    Challenge: Escaping

    Undesired Behavior: Your dog runs into the street.
    Quick solution: Keep your dog on leash or within a well-fenced yard. This can save your dog's life!
    Tips: Implement multiple barriers and safety measures — like baby gates, ex-pens, an extra safety leash attached to you in case one is dropped or breaks — to prevent your dog from escaping and running to the street. Teach and strengthen emergency recall.
    Training Resources: Reactive Rover: Recall classEscape Behavior in DogsImpulse Control, Overstimulation, DSCC & Choice Playlist

    Challenge: Resource Guarding

    Undesired Behavior: Multiple dogs in your home fight over mealtimes, toys, doorways, etc.

    Quick solution: Feed them in completely separate areas (different rooms, in crates or on tie-downs) with a visual barrier between the dogs (door, wall, furniture, etc.). Supervise mealtimes. After mealtime, pick up food bowls, whether they are empty or not (some dogs may guard empty food bowls). Hold one dog back while letting the other dog through a doorway or other tight spaces. Provide an abundance of toys (enough for all dogs) and only allow supervised toy time.

    Tips: Train each dog to "wait" at doorways, and release one at a time using their names. Learn how to predict and prevent fights by reading body language and identifying triggers. Keep dogs in separate rooms when they are home alone or unsupervised.

    Training Resources: Retos de comportamiento: Vigilancia de recursos, Resource Guarding ResourcesReading Body Language PlaylistSeguridad Prevención de mordeduras de perroIntroducir a los perros en casa

    Más recursos sobre comportamiento y adiestramiento

    San Diego Humane Society ofrece clases de adiestramiento y recursos para atender diversas necesidades de los animales de compañía.

    Nuestra filosofía de adiestramiento se basa en los conceptos de la ciencia del comportamiento del refuerzo positivo. Adiestrar a su mascota utilizando estos conceptos no sólo le ayudará a aprender nuevos comportamientos más rápidamente, sino que también fortalecerá el vínculo que comparten.

    Visite nuestro sitio web calendario actual de cursos de formación o llame al 619-279-5961.

    Recursos adicionales

    homeless man with his dog

    Guía de apoyo a los sin techo

    Hoarding Case El Cajon Cd 120116 (172) Cropped 2017 Mo 00006549

    Animal Hoarding: A Complex Problem

    A grey cat laying down with a grey background

    Overstimulated Behavior in Cats