mistivydel
Exploring the pasture
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- Dec 18, 2012
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Hi all,
I'm looking for some advice about how to get my Great Pyr puppy to quit chasing our two Nigerian Dwarf goats! Here's her story:
She's about 10 months old right now. She grew up in a barn with a larger herd of Nubian goats and two other Great Pyrs (one older, not really trained to guard and another puppy, her brother) until about two months ago when she came here with us. She's never even been inside a house, so I feel pretty confident that she has good potential for being a dedicated guardian for the goats and not too attached to humans. She gets along well with our two little does, they'll nap next to each other and follow each other around calmly. The only time that she shows actual aggression towards them is when she has food, so we're careful to feed her separate from them. The problem is that she is a puppy, and she'll chase them like crazy if given the opportunity and she's in a playful mood. I don't think that she's actually showing aggression towards them, but she's already almost twice their size and she'll nip at them as if they were puppies.
So when she first came home with us our older, feisty doe would headbutt her if the puppy tried to play. We NEVER interfered with this, we encouraged the doe to do this as much as possible!! It didn't seem to be very effective in actually getting the puppy to stop chasing and playing though, so we took a tip from another post on here about how to get LGD's to stop killing chickens and anytime we witnessed her chasing the goats we would push her onto her back and scream at her at the top of our lungs - NO! BAD DOG! - all of that, until she would sigh, stop wriggling, and submit. It scared her at first, but hasn't been successful in actually stopping the behavior. I wish that we had more time to be outside and really be consistent with the discipline when we see her chasing, but we just can't be out there all day. I've seen others advise to never leave LGD puppies alone and free-roaming with livestock until you're sure that they'll behave, so for the past few weeks she's been tied up on a long chain inside the fence where the goats hang out and graze. The goats actually spend a lot of time around her when she's chained up, but then they're also noticeably much more comfortable to go out into more open spaces to graze since they know she can't chase them (they have about 2 acres to roam).
I feel really bad for having her chained up like this during the day. She has all night to run around the 2 acres, and I make sure to go out at least one hour or so a day to just throw sticks and run her around away from the goats, but I wish she could just roam free with the goats.
So my questions are:
Are there other training methods other than the rolling over & yelling angrily method that can be really effective?
Is it horribly cruel to have her chained up like that, with time for exercise every day and night time to run free?
Will she eventually grow out of the ultra-playful stage after her puppy and then adolescent stages, and maybe just stop chasing on her own?
(On another note, her other bad habit is jumping up on humans - any tips for that??)
Any other advice you have would be great!
I'm looking for some advice about how to get my Great Pyr puppy to quit chasing our two Nigerian Dwarf goats! Here's her story:
She's about 10 months old right now. She grew up in a barn with a larger herd of Nubian goats and two other Great Pyrs (one older, not really trained to guard and another puppy, her brother) until about two months ago when she came here with us. She's never even been inside a house, so I feel pretty confident that she has good potential for being a dedicated guardian for the goats and not too attached to humans. She gets along well with our two little does, they'll nap next to each other and follow each other around calmly. The only time that she shows actual aggression towards them is when she has food, so we're careful to feed her separate from them. The problem is that she is a puppy, and she'll chase them like crazy if given the opportunity and she's in a playful mood. I don't think that she's actually showing aggression towards them, but she's already almost twice their size and she'll nip at them as if they were puppies.
So when she first came home with us our older, feisty doe would headbutt her if the puppy tried to play. We NEVER interfered with this, we encouraged the doe to do this as much as possible!! It didn't seem to be very effective in actually getting the puppy to stop chasing and playing though, so we took a tip from another post on here about how to get LGD's to stop killing chickens and anytime we witnessed her chasing the goats we would push her onto her back and scream at her at the top of our lungs - NO! BAD DOG! - all of that, until she would sigh, stop wriggling, and submit. It scared her at first, but hasn't been successful in actually stopping the behavior. I wish that we had more time to be outside and really be consistent with the discipline when we see her chasing, but we just can't be out there all day. I've seen others advise to never leave LGD puppies alone and free-roaming with livestock until you're sure that they'll behave, so for the past few weeks she's been tied up on a long chain inside the fence where the goats hang out and graze. The goats actually spend a lot of time around her when she's chained up, but then they're also noticeably much more comfortable to go out into more open spaces to graze since they know she can't chase them (they have about 2 acres to roam).
I feel really bad for having her chained up like this during the day. She has all night to run around the 2 acres, and I make sure to go out at least one hour or so a day to just throw sticks and run her around away from the goats, but I wish she could just roam free with the goats.
So my questions are:
Are there other training methods other than the rolling over & yelling angrily method that can be really effective?
Is it horribly cruel to have her chained up like that, with time for exercise every day and night time to run free?
Will she eventually grow out of the ultra-playful stage after her puppy and then adolescent stages, and maybe just stop chasing on her own?
(On another note, her other bad habit is jumping up on humans - any tips for that??)
Any other advice you have would be great!