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The Watercooler
Help To Avoid difficult child Dog - New Rescue
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 315392" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>My two have that issue as well- they do fine with their own toys, but not the chewies/bones. At least one of us has to sit between them when they get them and make sure they only chew on the one they are given. Actually, I don't have to do that anymore as it seems they have learned but it was necessary for a long time to teach them. When they started "eyeing" each others' chew-bones so much that it looked like a fight might start, my son and I just held the dogs and traded which bones they were chewing on and they both would be happy- thinking I guess, that they just got the "better" one. LOL! Since it required our direct supervision and actually sitting with them until they learned not to mess with the other's chew-bone, they only got them when we were watching TV or something.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 315392, member: 3699"] My two have that issue as well- they do fine with their own toys, but not the chewies/bones. At least one of us has to sit between them when they get them and make sure they only chew on the one they are given. Actually, I don't have to do that anymore as it seems they have learned but it was necessary for a long time to teach them. When they started "eyeing" each others' chew-bones so much that it looked like a fight might start, my son and I just held the dogs and traded which bones they were chewing on and they both would be happy- thinking I guess, that they just got the "better" one. LOL! Since it required our direct supervision and actually sitting with them until they learned not to mess with the other's chew-bone, they only got them when we were watching TV or something. [/QUOTE]
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Help To Avoid difficult child Dog - New Rescue
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