| Its in the
Genes, well much of it is!
Now although the breed of dog
has a good deal to do with energy level, it is not
the only factor involved. It stands to reason that
if your puppy had very active parents with high
energy levels and grandparents with very high energy
levels that your puppy may easy have inherited some
of that energy. Take a look at your dogs parents and
ask about your puppies grandparents and pedigree. If
you know your pups pedigree it will help give you an
idea of what you can expect from your puppy as a
puppy and an adult. Many personality traits can be
passed along to offspring. An example of this would
be Beagles. Beagles bred and used for hunting that
are bred from hunting lines can have more energy,
higher energy levels than Beagles bred for
conformation (shows). Labradors bred for field
(hunting) can have higher energy levels than
Labradors bred for the show ring. This is the same
with most sporting and hunting breeds. Again its
genetics, BUT it is not everything and I'm sure
their are some Labradors and Beagles that hunt but
do not show high levels of energy all the time. It
is very important to get your puppy from a breeder
that breeds for quality, health and sound dogs. Many
dogs sold by poor or backyard breeders have activity
and energy problems because of temperament issues
from being poorly bred or sold too soon or just
ignored by the breeder until it was time to be sold.
Your breeder is everything when it comes to a
emotionally stable and sound dog.
There are no
bad dogs...just bad owners??
The most important point of
this page is; Dogs have energy, Puppies tend to have
even more energy. If your puppy tears up the tissues
or paper towel, steals the pen and chews it up,
chews on that leg of your chair, eats your dollar
bill you dropped, chases the cat, plays in your best
plant, poops on you best pair of shoes, eats the rug
or even pulls up the linoleum. He is not a bad puppy
or a hyper puppy. He is a healthy normal puppy with
energy that you the owner need to use up by training
and supervising him or her. He thinks the world is a
wonderful huge play yard and you are the one to
guide him in understanding his limits and the rules
but in a kind, understanding knowledgeable way. Dogs
do not chew things up to anger an owner. You may
have purchased a wonderfully bred dog from a
wonderful breeder, but if you do not nourish and
train that puppy correctly, you may as well throw
all that good breeding out the window!
It is
NATURE and
NURTURE! Your the
human, the dog is the
DOG! There are
no bad dogs, just misunderstood dogs and owners that
need enlightened and straightened out!
Pick your
dog carefully.
Pick the breed of dog you
want by the lifestyle you lead. If you want to sit
at home and watch tv with your dog you need a dog
with a more relaxed attitude lower energy output.
Look at what the breed was developed to do and see
if that dogs job would fit your lifestyle. A
Siberian Husky or Border Collie would not do well as
a couch potato. If you want a dog with constant
energy and a mind that needs to be kept busy, or you
have a farm in need of a vermin expert, the Jack
Russel may be the dog for you. If your always on the
go outside and love to hike or run, that Husky may
be the right breed for you! Regardless of the breed
or type of dog you have, try to think of energy as
just that
ENERGY. Learn
how to teach your dog to focus and direct that
energy. Enroll your dog in a training class and
learn how to turn that cute bundle of energy into a
wonderful canine companion!
Tips to
help!
To help harness that load
of puppy or dog energy you can... Get your dogs
attention and try to keep it! Usually food helps.
Don't hand out treats to your dog but exchange a
goodie for something you want from the puppy or dog.
Make a noise and when your puppy looks at you tell
him yes and feed him a reward. It is important you
think of the treat as a reward not a treat! After
you have convinced your dog that looking at you is a
good thing throw the dogs name in their. Say his
name and feed him if he looks at you. Do NOT repeat
the name you will train your dog not to listen. If
you see your dog sitting.. slide a treat to him. But
don't say anything. Reward the behavior you see that
you like and ignore the wrong behavior if you can.
The more commands you give your dog the less he or
she will listen. If you fed your dog every time you
saw him sitting.. (without giving a sit command)
your dog will start to sit when he sees you. Sitting
is much better than being jumped on. This is just
one quick lesson in controlling behavior and energy.
Good luck with your loving bundle of fur! |