How to stop my dog chewing on everything?












6














Ok so recently my dog(I don't know if this matters but she's a German Shepherd) has been chewing everything outside which I'd presume because she's teething but she is 6 months and I don't know how long teething will last in dogs. So what's a way to train her not to chew or play with things I don't want her to play with. I on the other hand got tired of it and is tied up in the backyard due to school meaning I'm chaining her to a small area outside close to her house, food, and water is this a good idea? I feel like it's not, but on the other hand I feel it's needed she's been doing it for months and told her and showed her once a day not to play with something which has been effective, but recently went back to playing with things I told her not to.










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    A K9? As in a police dog? Or did you mean a German Shepherd, a common breed for police K9 units?
    – Nic Hartley
    Dec 13 '18 at 19:16












  • Oh yeah sorry yes German Shepard
    – user185932
    Dec 13 '18 at 21:03






  • 3




    TL;DR: 'I don't have the time or the patience.' = doggy day care. If you don't have the money you'd better find some patience or a new owner. Otherwise you're prob going to be one of those owners of a dog they say doesn't bite, that bites people.
    – Mazura
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:45






  • 3




    Your dog needs exercise (tons of it). Take her on walks, yes. But she will expell more energy at your local "dog park". Plus she will get to socialize with other dogs - something else that dogs thrive on!
    – elbrant
    Dec 14 '18 at 2:33






  • 1




    @user185932 Walking alone might not be enough to tire her out. You could search for more efficient ways to excercise a high-energy dog (like obedience, agility, tracking) or try out some games described in the second half of this answer
    – Elmy
    Dec 14 '18 at 7:15
















6














Ok so recently my dog(I don't know if this matters but she's a German Shepherd) has been chewing everything outside which I'd presume because she's teething but she is 6 months and I don't know how long teething will last in dogs. So what's a way to train her not to chew or play with things I don't want her to play with. I on the other hand got tired of it and is tied up in the backyard due to school meaning I'm chaining her to a small area outside close to her house, food, and water is this a good idea? I feel like it's not, but on the other hand I feel it's needed she's been doing it for months and told her and showed her once a day not to play with something which has been effective, but recently went back to playing with things I told her not to.










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    A K9? As in a police dog? Or did you mean a German Shepherd, a common breed for police K9 units?
    – Nic Hartley
    Dec 13 '18 at 19:16












  • Oh yeah sorry yes German Shepard
    – user185932
    Dec 13 '18 at 21:03






  • 3




    TL;DR: 'I don't have the time or the patience.' = doggy day care. If you don't have the money you'd better find some patience or a new owner. Otherwise you're prob going to be one of those owners of a dog they say doesn't bite, that bites people.
    – Mazura
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:45






  • 3




    Your dog needs exercise (tons of it). Take her on walks, yes. But she will expell more energy at your local "dog park". Plus she will get to socialize with other dogs - something else that dogs thrive on!
    – elbrant
    Dec 14 '18 at 2:33






  • 1




    @user185932 Walking alone might not be enough to tire her out. You could search for more efficient ways to excercise a high-energy dog (like obedience, agility, tracking) or try out some games described in the second half of this answer
    – Elmy
    Dec 14 '18 at 7:15














6












6








6







Ok so recently my dog(I don't know if this matters but she's a German Shepherd) has been chewing everything outside which I'd presume because she's teething but she is 6 months and I don't know how long teething will last in dogs. So what's a way to train her not to chew or play with things I don't want her to play with. I on the other hand got tired of it and is tied up in the backyard due to school meaning I'm chaining her to a small area outside close to her house, food, and water is this a good idea? I feel like it's not, but on the other hand I feel it's needed she's been doing it for months and told her and showed her once a day not to play with something which has been effective, but recently went back to playing with things I told her not to.










share|improve this question















Ok so recently my dog(I don't know if this matters but she's a German Shepherd) has been chewing everything outside which I'd presume because she's teething but she is 6 months and I don't know how long teething will last in dogs. So what's a way to train her not to chew or play with things I don't want her to play with. I on the other hand got tired of it and is tied up in the backyard due to school meaning I'm chaining her to a small area outside close to her house, food, and water is this a good idea? I feel like it's not, but on the other hand I feel it's needed she's been doing it for months and told her and showed her once a day not to play with something which has been effective, but recently went back to playing with things I told her not to.







dogs behavior






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 14 '18 at 7:07









Elmy

4,125222




4,125222










asked Dec 13 '18 at 16:25









user185932

3315




3315








  • 3




    A K9? As in a police dog? Or did you mean a German Shepherd, a common breed for police K9 units?
    – Nic Hartley
    Dec 13 '18 at 19:16












  • Oh yeah sorry yes German Shepard
    – user185932
    Dec 13 '18 at 21:03






  • 3




    TL;DR: 'I don't have the time or the patience.' = doggy day care. If you don't have the money you'd better find some patience or a new owner. Otherwise you're prob going to be one of those owners of a dog they say doesn't bite, that bites people.
    – Mazura
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:45






  • 3




    Your dog needs exercise (tons of it). Take her on walks, yes. But she will expell more energy at your local "dog park". Plus she will get to socialize with other dogs - something else that dogs thrive on!
    – elbrant
    Dec 14 '18 at 2:33






  • 1




    @user185932 Walking alone might not be enough to tire her out. You could search for more efficient ways to excercise a high-energy dog (like obedience, agility, tracking) or try out some games described in the second half of this answer
    – Elmy
    Dec 14 '18 at 7:15














  • 3




    A K9? As in a police dog? Or did you mean a German Shepherd, a common breed for police K9 units?
    – Nic Hartley
    Dec 13 '18 at 19:16












  • Oh yeah sorry yes German Shepard
    – user185932
    Dec 13 '18 at 21:03






  • 3




    TL;DR: 'I don't have the time or the patience.' = doggy day care. If you don't have the money you'd better find some patience or a new owner. Otherwise you're prob going to be one of those owners of a dog they say doesn't bite, that bites people.
    – Mazura
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:45






  • 3




    Your dog needs exercise (tons of it). Take her on walks, yes. But she will expell more energy at your local "dog park". Plus she will get to socialize with other dogs - something else that dogs thrive on!
    – elbrant
    Dec 14 '18 at 2:33






  • 1




    @user185932 Walking alone might not be enough to tire her out. You could search for more efficient ways to excercise a high-energy dog (like obedience, agility, tracking) or try out some games described in the second half of this answer
    – Elmy
    Dec 14 '18 at 7:15








3




3




A K9? As in a police dog? Or did you mean a German Shepherd, a common breed for police K9 units?
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 19:16






A K9? As in a police dog? Or did you mean a German Shepherd, a common breed for police K9 units?
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 19:16














Oh yeah sorry yes German Shepard
– user185932
Dec 13 '18 at 21:03




Oh yeah sorry yes German Shepard
– user185932
Dec 13 '18 at 21:03




3




3




TL;DR: 'I don't have the time or the patience.' = doggy day care. If you don't have the money you'd better find some patience or a new owner. Otherwise you're prob going to be one of those owners of a dog they say doesn't bite, that bites people.
– Mazura
Dec 14 '18 at 0:45




TL;DR: 'I don't have the time or the patience.' = doggy day care. If you don't have the money you'd better find some patience or a new owner. Otherwise you're prob going to be one of those owners of a dog they say doesn't bite, that bites people.
– Mazura
Dec 14 '18 at 0:45




3




3




Your dog needs exercise (tons of it). Take her on walks, yes. But she will expell more energy at your local "dog park". Plus she will get to socialize with other dogs - something else that dogs thrive on!
– elbrant
Dec 14 '18 at 2:33




Your dog needs exercise (tons of it). Take her on walks, yes. But she will expell more energy at your local "dog park". Plus she will get to socialize with other dogs - something else that dogs thrive on!
– elbrant
Dec 14 '18 at 2:33




1




1




@user185932 Walking alone might not be enough to tire her out. You could search for more efficient ways to excercise a high-energy dog (like obedience, agility, tracking) or try out some games described in the second half of this answer
– Elmy
Dec 14 '18 at 7:15




@user185932 Walking alone might not be enough to tire her out. You could search for more efficient ways to excercise a high-energy dog (like obedience, agility, tracking) or try out some games described in the second half of this answer
– Elmy
Dec 14 '18 at 7:15










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















18














Chaining a dog is not good in general and might increase the problem in this case.



Your dog is young and full of energy. If she's bored, she entertains herself by chewing on things. Playing with her and taking long walks is a better way to entertain her. With some training, you could ride a bike or skateboard or roller skates and have your dog run with you.



Most young dogs prefer to chew on things that smell, especially shoes or leather products. Offering her a toy like a rope or hard chewing bones may satisfy her need to chew on things without destroying your stuff. But it's totally normal for young dogs to chew on things. They don't have hands to feel objects, so they take them into their mouth and chew on them.



Now to the discipline.

You must discipline a dog within 3 seconds of doing something wrong. When you come home, show her a chewed-on object and scold her, she won't even kow what you mean. She cannot understand why you are showing her the object and are so angry. She cannot understand that the chewing she did an hour ago makes you angry now.



If you don't want her to chew on things, you should put those things in a place where she cannot reach them. You should entertain her by playing with her or taking walks, then she won't be so bored anymore. Putting her on a short chain is even more boring and could make the problem even bigger.






share|improve this answer





























    3














    Whenever she does chew on things, have a small and somewhat harmless water spray bottle. Limit their dependability and give slight discipline. Buy a lot of chew toys too! Dogs have a lot of habits like this when they are a puppy. Chewing things for puppies can sometimes be uncontrolled, for I had the same problem with my schnauzer. Avoid products that have toxic ink or ingredients towards dogs, especially plastic food bowls!






    share|improve this answer























    • Kennels/"cages" should never be used as punishment for a dog, especially a young one.
      – Allison C
      Dec 13 '18 at 18:16










    • @AllisonC Okay, I'm sorry about that. I will delete my comment immediately if you want me to! C: Thanks for your feedback.
      – Madison Landonion
      Dec 13 '18 at 18:34












    • No need to delete, but I'd suggest editing to remove the idea about using a cage, and put some more care into expanding on the rest of the answer about discipline/redirecting the behavior.
      – Allison C
      Dec 13 '18 at 18:37






    • 1




      Related post How to use a spray bottle as negative reinforcement?
      – James Jenkins
      Dec 13 '18 at 18:51






    • 1




      @MadisonLandonion you posted an answer not a question. I am telling you how to improve it. Please read How do I write a good answer?
      – James Jenkins
      Dec 14 '18 at 11:39



















    3














    Buy a couple of butcher bones and after meals give the pup a bone to chew on for awhile - Maybe half hour to hour. Then their jaw will be too tired to chew on anything else! Instead of buying new bones all the time, refill the empty butcher bone, I used high quality chicken strips, softened 5 seconds in microwave and cut in three then stuffed in there so they are hard to get out. Assuming your dog is a puppy, this is a normal phase you can help them get through while not chewing up your stuff. I did it from about 7 months to about 14 months. Also crated him when we went out, with the bone to chew, very happy dog, and owners!






    share|improve this answer





















    • This is also good for when you take the bone away, you teach the dog to not be defensive with food/bones/other things precious to them.
      – Adam S.
      Dec 14 '18 at 16:44











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    3 Answers
    3






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    3 Answers
    3






    active

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    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

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    18














    Chaining a dog is not good in general and might increase the problem in this case.



    Your dog is young and full of energy. If she's bored, she entertains herself by chewing on things. Playing with her and taking long walks is a better way to entertain her. With some training, you could ride a bike or skateboard or roller skates and have your dog run with you.



    Most young dogs prefer to chew on things that smell, especially shoes or leather products. Offering her a toy like a rope or hard chewing bones may satisfy her need to chew on things without destroying your stuff. But it's totally normal for young dogs to chew on things. They don't have hands to feel objects, so they take them into their mouth and chew on them.



    Now to the discipline.

    You must discipline a dog within 3 seconds of doing something wrong. When you come home, show her a chewed-on object and scold her, she won't even kow what you mean. She cannot understand why you are showing her the object and are so angry. She cannot understand that the chewing she did an hour ago makes you angry now.



    If you don't want her to chew on things, you should put those things in a place where she cannot reach them. You should entertain her by playing with her or taking walks, then she won't be so bored anymore. Putting her on a short chain is even more boring and could make the problem even bigger.






    share|improve this answer


























      18














      Chaining a dog is not good in general and might increase the problem in this case.



      Your dog is young and full of energy. If she's bored, she entertains herself by chewing on things. Playing with her and taking long walks is a better way to entertain her. With some training, you could ride a bike or skateboard or roller skates and have your dog run with you.



      Most young dogs prefer to chew on things that smell, especially shoes or leather products. Offering her a toy like a rope or hard chewing bones may satisfy her need to chew on things without destroying your stuff. But it's totally normal for young dogs to chew on things. They don't have hands to feel objects, so they take them into their mouth and chew on them.



      Now to the discipline.

      You must discipline a dog within 3 seconds of doing something wrong. When you come home, show her a chewed-on object and scold her, she won't even kow what you mean. She cannot understand why you are showing her the object and are so angry. She cannot understand that the chewing she did an hour ago makes you angry now.



      If you don't want her to chew on things, you should put those things in a place where she cannot reach them. You should entertain her by playing with her or taking walks, then she won't be so bored anymore. Putting her on a short chain is even more boring and could make the problem even bigger.






      share|improve this answer
























        18












        18








        18






        Chaining a dog is not good in general and might increase the problem in this case.



        Your dog is young and full of energy. If she's bored, she entertains herself by chewing on things. Playing with her and taking long walks is a better way to entertain her. With some training, you could ride a bike or skateboard or roller skates and have your dog run with you.



        Most young dogs prefer to chew on things that smell, especially shoes or leather products. Offering her a toy like a rope or hard chewing bones may satisfy her need to chew on things without destroying your stuff. But it's totally normal for young dogs to chew on things. They don't have hands to feel objects, so they take them into their mouth and chew on them.



        Now to the discipline.

        You must discipline a dog within 3 seconds of doing something wrong. When you come home, show her a chewed-on object and scold her, she won't even kow what you mean. She cannot understand why you are showing her the object and are so angry. She cannot understand that the chewing she did an hour ago makes you angry now.



        If you don't want her to chew on things, you should put those things in a place where she cannot reach them. You should entertain her by playing with her or taking walks, then she won't be so bored anymore. Putting her on a short chain is even more boring and could make the problem even bigger.






        share|improve this answer












        Chaining a dog is not good in general and might increase the problem in this case.



        Your dog is young and full of energy. If she's bored, she entertains herself by chewing on things. Playing with her and taking long walks is a better way to entertain her. With some training, you could ride a bike or skateboard or roller skates and have your dog run with you.



        Most young dogs prefer to chew on things that smell, especially shoes or leather products. Offering her a toy like a rope or hard chewing bones may satisfy her need to chew on things without destroying your stuff. But it's totally normal for young dogs to chew on things. They don't have hands to feel objects, so they take them into their mouth and chew on them.



        Now to the discipline.

        You must discipline a dog within 3 seconds of doing something wrong. When you come home, show her a chewed-on object and scold her, she won't even kow what you mean. She cannot understand why you are showing her the object and are so angry. She cannot understand that the chewing she did an hour ago makes you angry now.



        If you don't want her to chew on things, you should put those things in a place where she cannot reach them. You should entertain her by playing with her or taking walks, then she won't be so bored anymore. Putting her on a short chain is even more boring and could make the problem even bigger.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 13 '18 at 18:12









        Elmy

        4,125222




        4,125222























            3














            Whenever she does chew on things, have a small and somewhat harmless water spray bottle. Limit their dependability and give slight discipline. Buy a lot of chew toys too! Dogs have a lot of habits like this when they are a puppy. Chewing things for puppies can sometimes be uncontrolled, for I had the same problem with my schnauzer. Avoid products that have toxic ink or ingredients towards dogs, especially plastic food bowls!






            share|improve this answer























            • Kennels/"cages" should never be used as punishment for a dog, especially a young one.
              – Allison C
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:16










            • @AllisonC Okay, I'm sorry about that. I will delete my comment immediately if you want me to! C: Thanks for your feedback.
              – Madison Landonion
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:34












            • No need to delete, but I'd suggest editing to remove the idea about using a cage, and put some more care into expanding on the rest of the answer about discipline/redirecting the behavior.
              – Allison C
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:37






            • 1




              Related post How to use a spray bottle as negative reinforcement?
              – James Jenkins
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:51






            • 1




              @MadisonLandonion you posted an answer not a question. I am telling you how to improve it. Please read How do I write a good answer?
              – James Jenkins
              Dec 14 '18 at 11:39
















            3














            Whenever she does chew on things, have a small and somewhat harmless water spray bottle. Limit their dependability and give slight discipline. Buy a lot of chew toys too! Dogs have a lot of habits like this when they are a puppy. Chewing things for puppies can sometimes be uncontrolled, for I had the same problem with my schnauzer. Avoid products that have toxic ink or ingredients towards dogs, especially plastic food bowls!






            share|improve this answer























            • Kennels/"cages" should never be used as punishment for a dog, especially a young one.
              – Allison C
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:16










            • @AllisonC Okay, I'm sorry about that. I will delete my comment immediately if you want me to! C: Thanks for your feedback.
              – Madison Landonion
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:34












            • No need to delete, but I'd suggest editing to remove the idea about using a cage, and put some more care into expanding on the rest of the answer about discipline/redirecting the behavior.
              – Allison C
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:37






            • 1




              Related post How to use a spray bottle as negative reinforcement?
              – James Jenkins
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:51






            • 1




              @MadisonLandonion you posted an answer not a question. I am telling you how to improve it. Please read How do I write a good answer?
              – James Jenkins
              Dec 14 '18 at 11:39














            3












            3








            3






            Whenever she does chew on things, have a small and somewhat harmless water spray bottle. Limit their dependability and give slight discipline. Buy a lot of chew toys too! Dogs have a lot of habits like this when they are a puppy. Chewing things for puppies can sometimes be uncontrolled, for I had the same problem with my schnauzer. Avoid products that have toxic ink or ingredients towards dogs, especially plastic food bowls!






            share|improve this answer














            Whenever she does chew on things, have a small and somewhat harmless water spray bottle. Limit their dependability and give slight discipline. Buy a lot of chew toys too! Dogs have a lot of habits like this when they are a puppy. Chewing things for puppies can sometimes be uncontrolled, for I had the same problem with my schnauzer. Avoid products that have toxic ink or ingredients towards dogs, especially plastic food bowls!







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 13 '18 at 18:41

























            answered Dec 13 '18 at 16:35









            Madison Landonion

            927




            927












            • Kennels/"cages" should never be used as punishment for a dog, especially a young one.
              – Allison C
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:16










            • @AllisonC Okay, I'm sorry about that. I will delete my comment immediately if you want me to! C: Thanks for your feedback.
              – Madison Landonion
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:34












            • No need to delete, but I'd suggest editing to remove the idea about using a cage, and put some more care into expanding on the rest of the answer about discipline/redirecting the behavior.
              – Allison C
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:37






            • 1




              Related post How to use a spray bottle as negative reinforcement?
              – James Jenkins
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:51






            • 1




              @MadisonLandonion you posted an answer not a question. I am telling you how to improve it. Please read How do I write a good answer?
              – James Jenkins
              Dec 14 '18 at 11:39


















            • Kennels/"cages" should never be used as punishment for a dog, especially a young one.
              – Allison C
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:16










            • @AllisonC Okay, I'm sorry about that. I will delete my comment immediately if you want me to! C: Thanks for your feedback.
              – Madison Landonion
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:34












            • No need to delete, but I'd suggest editing to remove the idea about using a cage, and put some more care into expanding on the rest of the answer about discipline/redirecting the behavior.
              – Allison C
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:37






            • 1




              Related post How to use a spray bottle as negative reinforcement?
              – James Jenkins
              Dec 13 '18 at 18:51






            • 1




              @MadisonLandonion you posted an answer not a question. I am telling you how to improve it. Please read How do I write a good answer?
              – James Jenkins
              Dec 14 '18 at 11:39
















            Kennels/"cages" should never be used as punishment for a dog, especially a young one.
            – Allison C
            Dec 13 '18 at 18:16




            Kennels/"cages" should never be used as punishment for a dog, especially a young one.
            – Allison C
            Dec 13 '18 at 18:16












            @AllisonC Okay, I'm sorry about that. I will delete my comment immediately if you want me to! C: Thanks for your feedback.
            – Madison Landonion
            Dec 13 '18 at 18:34






            @AllisonC Okay, I'm sorry about that. I will delete my comment immediately if you want me to! C: Thanks for your feedback.
            – Madison Landonion
            Dec 13 '18 at 18:34














            No need to delete, but I'd suggest editing to remove the idea about using a cage, and put some more care into expanding on the rest of the answer about discipline/redirecting the behavior.
            – Allison C
            Dec 13 '18 at 18:37




            No need to delete, but I'd suggest editing to remove the idea about using a cage, and put some more care into expanding on the rest of the answer about discipline/redirecting the behavior.
            – Allison C
            Dec 13 '18 at 18:37




            1




            1




            Related post How to use a spray bottle as negative reinforcement?
            – James Jenkins
            Dec 13 '18 at 18:51




            Related post How to use a spray bottle as negative reinforcement?
            – James Jenkins
            Dec 13 '18 at 18:51




            1




            1




            @MadisonLandonion you posted an answer not a question. I am telling you how to improve it. Please read How do I write a good answer?
            – James Jenkins
            Dec 14 '18 at 11:39




            @MadisonLandonion you posted an answer not a question. I am telling you how to improve it. Please read How do I write a good answer?
            – James Jenkins
            Dec 14 '18 at 11:39











            3














            Buy a couple of butcher bones and after meals give the pup a bone to chew on for awhile - Maybe half hour to hour. Then their jaw will be too tired to chew on anything else! Instead of buying new bones all the time, refill the empty butcher bone, I used high quality chicken strips, softened 5 seconds in microwave and cut in three then stuffed in there so they are hard to get out. Assuming your dog is a puppy, this is a normal phase you can help them get through while not chewing up your stuff. I did it from about 7 months to about 14 months. Also crated him when we went out, with the bone to chew, very happy dog, and owners!






            share|improve this answer





















            • This is also good for when you take the bone away, you teach the dog to not be defensive with food/bones/other things precious to them.
              – Adam S.
              Dec 14 '18 at 16:44
















            3














            Buy a couple of butcher bones and after meals give the pup a bone to chew on for awhile - Maybe half hour to hour. Then their jaw will be too tired to chew on anything else! Instead of buying new bones all the time, refill the empty butcher bone, I used high quality chicken strips, softened 5 seconds in microwave and cut in three then stuffed in there so they are hard to get out. Assuming your dog is a puppy, this is a normal phase you can help them get through while not chewing up your stuff. I did it from about 7 months to about 14 months. Also crated him when we went out, with the bone to chew, very happy dog, and owners!






            share|improve this answer





















            • This is also good for when you take the bone away, you teach the dog to not be defensive with food/bones/other things precious to them.
              – Adam S.
              Dec 14 '18 at 16:44














            3












            3








            3






            Buy a couple of butcher bones and after meals give the pup a bone to chew on for awhile - Maybe half hour to hour. Then their jaw will be too tired to chew on anything else! Instead of buying new bones all the time, refill the empty butcher bone, I used high quality chicken strips, softened 5 seconds in microwave and cut in three then stuffed in there so they are hard to get out. Assuming your dog is a puppy, this is a normal phase you can help them get through while not chewing up your stuff. I did it from about 7 months to about 14 months. Also crated him when we went out, with the bone to chew, very happy dog, and owners!






            share|improve this answer












            Buy a couple of butcher bones and after meals give the pup a bone to chew on for awhile - Maybe half hour to hour. Then their jaw will be too tired to chew on anything else! Instead of buying new bones all the time, refill the empty butcher bone, I used high quality chicken strips, softened 5 seconds in microwave and cut in three then stuffed in there so they are hard to get out. Assuming your dog is a puppy, this is a normal phase you can help them get through while not chewing up your stuff. I did it from about 7 months to about 14 months. Also crated him when we went out, with the bone to chew, very happy dog, and owners!







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Dec 14 '18 at 8:45









            user13813

            311




            311












            • This is also good for when you take the bone away, you teach the dog to not be defensive with food/bones/other things precious to them.
              – Adam S.
              Dec 14 '18 at 16:44


















            • This is also good for when you take the bone away, you teach the dog to not be defensive with food/bones/other things precious to them.
              – Adam S.
              Dec 14 '18 at 16:44
















            This is also good for when you take the bone away, you teach the dog to not be defensive with food/bones/other things precious to them.
            – Adam S.
            Dec 14 '18 at 16:44




            This is also good for when you take the bone away, you teach the dog to not be defensive with food/bones/other things precious to them.
            – Adam S.
            Dec 14 '18 at 16:44


















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