Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Training can help curb dog’s chewing problem

- CATHY ROSENTHAL Send your pet questions, stories and tips to cathy@ petpundit.com. Please include your name, city and state.

Dear Cathy: We have a 1½-year-old beagle mix that we rescued. We got her around 6 months old. She is adorable, loving and gets along well with our 7-yearold lab-pit mix that we also rescued as a pup.

Our problem started when we began crate training her. She ripped everything we put in the crate — pillows, blankets and towels — and she sometimes eats it. She’s already had bowel surgery to remove a wad of rope from a rope toy she swallowed.

We tried putting nothing in the crate, but she tore things outside the crate, even if we were home. She is very quiet, so we don’t know what she’s done until we find the holes and missing material. She rips apart any toy that is not the toughest, strongest rubber. She has eaten pillows, zippers, Velcro, shoelaces, tops of shoes and snaps.

Our veterinari­an says beagles do this and that she will outgrow it. We have had huskies, a beagle and a labpit mix and never experience­d this behavior beyond the initial puppy chewing stage. Is there anything we can do? — Terry, Commack, N.Y.

Dear Terry: Your veterinari­an is right that most dogs outgrow chewing and other destructiv­e behaviors around 18 months old, so you might see a change over the next few weeks.

While dogs sometimes ingest things they chew, swallowing things such as pillows, zippers and rope toys with the frequency you describe is not an entirely normal behavior. Dogs also can develop behavioral or psychologi­cal problems, which may require medication. Initially, you can try calming treats, available at pet stores and online, or introduce her to melatonin, which I mentioned in a recent column, to see if it will relax her. If it doesn’t help, go back to your veterinari­an to discuss medication.

Whether bad habit, end of puppyhood or psychologi­cal problem, she still needs supervisio­n for now and correction­s when caught chewing inappropri­ate items. Take away the item, say “no,” and give her a hard rubber toy instead. Put peanut butter or other spray treat inside the toy.

You also can spray Bitter Apple (available at pet stores or online) on items to discourage chewing, introduce basic obedience training daily to keep her mind busy, and take her on walks to expend physical energy.

Dear Cathy: I just read the story about Janice in New York feeding a feral cat. I have a wonderful, loving indoor calico who started out in the same situation seven years ago. I fed her, and she warmed up over time, with the same actions Janice described, which I later realized was her attempt to connect. She batted the window with my indoor cats and became more tame. She slept in our detached garage on a heating pad in the cold weather and I put a heater in front of her food and water to keep it from freezing.

This went on for three years. She eventually let me brush her and entice her inside the sliding door for short periods.

Finally, I took the plunge after a very high January electric bill and brought her inside that fall. She is in her fourth winter indoors and has become a very loving and friendly cat. The other two have accepted her, although one is friendlier than the other.

Janice has more indoor cats, which might be a problem moving hers inside. Perhaps my story will give her hope that someday she will have the same success as I did. — Cherry, Chicago

Dear Cherry: Thanks for sharing your story and giving Janice hope with her feral feline.

It can be stressful to see a feral cat outside in the severe cold and not know how to help. No one can expect a feral cat to enter the house with other felines without the cat learning to trust the human first, which, as you describe, can take time.

While the number of cats inside a home can definitely impact how long this process might take, your letter shows what’s possible with patience and perseveran­ce.

 ??  ?? Miercoles, 2, takes time to warm up but would be a perfect addition to a loving home. The adoption fee is $25. Adoption hours are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily at the Animal Foundation, 655 N. Mojave Road. To take her home, visit animalfoun­dation.com.
Miercoles, 2, takes time to warm up but would be a perfect addition to a loving home. The adoption fee is $25. Adoption hours are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily at the Animal Foundation, 655 N. Mojave Road. To take her home, visit animalfoun­dation.com.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States