|
International Doodle Owners Group,
Doodle Development Periods
Doodle Development
Stages
Your puppy will pass through
many stages as he grows and develops. Many puppy owners are shocked,
surprised or downright freaked out about the way their cute little
puppy is behaving. Just check what stage of development the little
guy (or gal) is in... explains a lot (like he isn't crazy).
Behaviors can be accounted for with these stages, but a lot of these
behaviors are also not acceptable and you must train and lead the
way.
The mother of your puppy will
start the process by building the foundation. This responsibility
will then be turned over to you. It can not be expressed enough
times how important it is for you to train and lead your puppy so
that he will be a happy well adjusted member of your family for
life.
Puppy Toddlers Period
(3-8 Weeks) "Mom teaches dog manners"
During the Toddler period, the
doodle puppies emerge on their own from the litter. They venture
into the surrounding environment. These lessons learned in the
toddler stage are CRITICAL. Puppies removed too early tend to be
nervous, tend to bark inappropriately, tend to bite simply because
these lessons a mother and littermates usually provide were missed.
Training problems and long term behavior problems can often be
attributed to a puppy removed from the litter much too
soon.
Beginning at 3 weeks of age,
what is going on:
-
The first lessons learned
are dog specific behavioral
patterns.
-
They will learn various
postures meanings and their affects to their mother and
littermates.
-
They will learn how to
bite and what it is like to be bitten.
-
They will learn what
barking and other vocalizations mean and their uses.
-
They will learn how to
establish social relationships with other
dogs.
Beginning at 5 weeks of age
what is going on:
-
Vocalization
and tempered activities (dog manners) usually are learned at
approximately 5 weeks of age.
-
They will learn how to be
submissive to the leader of the pack.
-
They will learn and refine
additional postures, vocalizations and acceptable dog interaction
behaviors.
What will the puppy's mother
do:
The mother will growl, snarl
and snap to communicate. With a very few clear signals and
repetitions, the young puppy will learn quickly. At that point a
mothers glare or low growl is all that is needed to keep a young pup
in line. Littermates also learn clear signals of communication to
each other.
Socialization Period
(7 - 12 Weeks) and First Fear Impact Period (8 - 11 Weeks) "Lasting
impact, rapid learning"
Dogs that are denied
socialization during this critical Socialization period often become
unpredictable because they are fearful or aggressive. It is during
this time that your dog needs to have positive experiences. They
need to be introduced to new things and begin the groundwork to a
happy, well adjusted dog.
Beginning at 7 weeks of age
what is going on:
-
Short attention
spans.
-
Things learned are
permanent and will be resistant to change.
-
Puppy will be eager to
learn.
-
What he does and how he
learns now he will do as an adult.
-
Puppy's temperament and
personality will become more apparent.
-
Puppy will be
transitioning his education from his mother to his human
environment.
Beginning at 8 weeks and
ending at approximately 11 weeks of age what is going on:
What Can You Do:
-
Gradually introduce your
puppy to new things, environments and people.
-
Make experiences positive
(provide treats or toys).
-
Don't push your puppy in
to fearful situations - take things slowly and allow him at adjust
and get used to the situation.
-
Do not let others push
your puppy or be forceful with them.
-
Provide a secure
comforting demeanor.
-
Teach the puppy you are
there to protect and lead.
Seniority
Classification Period (12 - 16 Weeks) " You're not the boss of
me"
The puppy has been in the home
now for a few weeks. He has been watching you and the family very
closely. He is picking up on human behaviors and reactions. He is
learning the pecking order of the pack. As he observes and learns,
he will then attempt to figure out where exactly he stands in the
pack order, and also see if moving up in the pack will work. After
all, he knows who the "weak links" are and will start at the bottom
and try to move right up the pack. How could such a cute little pup
be such a pistol?
What is going on:
-
Puppy will begin to
question authority.
-
Puppy will attempt to move
himself up in the pack order.
-
Puppy will try to
dominate.
-
Puppy will grab
leashes.
-
Puppy will try to
determine what activities are going to be done and
when.
-
Puppy may
growl.
-
Puppy may put his mouth on
you.
-
Puppy can often be over
excited.
What you can do:
- Learn how your actions and body
language communicate to your dog.
- Suggested reading: The Dog Listener -
Author Jan Fennell
- Do not play aggressive games during
this phase. (tug or wrestling)
- If puppy becomes over excited, growls
or mouths you, you stop all activity.
- Be very aware of how the puppy reacts
with children - do not leave children unattended with the
puppy.
- Enroll in a puppy kindergarten class
to redirect some of the energy.
- Evaluate the whole family's methods of
interactions and corrections and make sure that all are consistent
and clear. (Unified front concept here)
Flight Instinct Period (4 - 8
months) "Fly like an eagle, into the wind"
Your cute little puppy has been following
you around for weeks. He has been aware of where you are and would
stay pretty close. During this period that same cute little puppy
will decide that he is ready to go solo and take off running quicker
than lightning. During this time, teaching the puppy that he must
stay close by or come when called is critical. The failure to do
this will result in a dog that will not be reliable to come or stay
close by as an adult and very well could lead the dog into a life or
death situation.
What is going on:
- The puppy will become more
independent.
- A puppy that would previously never go
very far will venture off
- The puppy will ignore commands to stay
close or come.
- How you handle refusal to come or stay
will affect future reliability off leash.
- Puppy will be clever in attempts to
run around loose.
What you can do:
- Leash on 100% of the time they are not in a
confined area.
- Never allow dog loose in an unconfined area. (yes
this is redundant to the above, so it must be pretty important for
us to say it twice)
- Being off leash outside of a confined area is
reserved for who have been well trained.
- Enroll in training class that utilizes positive
training techniques.
- Reinforce and continue to train your puppy
"come".
- Make coming a very positive experience.
- Oh...and never allow your puppy to be off leash
in an unconfined area.
Adolescence Period (7 - 10 months) "Welcome to the
Teenage Years - Enjoy the Ride"
This is one of the most difficult times for pet owners. They are
so surprised when their puppy turns into "devil dog" or "Cujo". This
often is a time when many families start to worry that maybe they
made a bad decision in getting a dog. Remember; you get what you put
into it. You take the time right now to teach good habits and you
will have the dog you always dreamed of for many years. This work
will pay off.
What is going on:
- The puppy will become a free and independent thinker.
- The puppy will continue to review the pack order.
- The puppy will be very energetic.
- The puppy will be exuberant and enthusiastic.
- They turn into clowns with teeth.
- They will delight in learning new and fun things.
What you can do:
- Appreciate the humor of it all.
- Have you read the book The Dog Listener yet? It
will help.
- Understand that despite the behaviors it is your
time to continue to train and reinforce the things you do want him
to do.
- Reaffirm the family pack order.
- Be realistic about expectations. (still very much
a puppy in a big boy body)
- Channel all that energy into positive learning
experiences.
- Continue with training classes, explore options
for additional training opportunities.
Second Fear Imprint Period (6 - 14 months) "
Yikes! What's up with that?"
You have a puppy that is full of beans, he runs
around like a clown in search of his next show. But then, Bam, he
refuses to walk down some stairs, he is shaking in the car, or he
jumps at the sound of a neighbor's music. Surprise! This is normal,
but you must help you dog figure out how to deal with his fears or
concerns. The skills of learning how to "shake it off and keep
going" will be valuable to him for the rest of his life. It will
also reduce the chances that the things he fears will not be
permanently imprinted for life.
What is going on:
- The puppy that was so confident will suddenly
become reluctant to new things.
- This period can be subtle.
- This period can come and go several times over
this entire period.
- It appear to be unprovoked or unrelated to any
specific occurrence.
- Puppy can become frustrating to
owners.
What you can do: Avoid extremes in your response.
(no anger or forcing or over comforting)
- Be patient and understanding.
- Be aware of surrounding and potential
triggers.
- Work on desensitizing him with gradual
introductions with rewards.
- Avoid too much reassurance or codling (which is a
reward for this behavior).
- Don't over read or correct the fearfulness - just
make light of it and encourage him to deal with his fear (work
though the fear).
- Praise with grand rewards for his
attempts.
- Your dog will take his clues from you, if you act
frightened or concerned he will too.
Mature Adulthood Development Period (1 - 3
years) "I shall protect thy kingdom!"
So the puppy is no longer an itty-bitty baby, he is
pretty much full grown in height. He will begin to fill out a bit
and develop more muscle tone. But mentally, the dog is still working
out some last details of his life and what it means to him. He IS a
member if the pack and now begins to find that his turf is worthy of
monitoring and protecting. Sort of sounds nice to have your dog be
protective, but don't fall for it. You do not want your dog to take
over these responsibilities because in no time you too will be under
the rule of the King Dog. Which can lead to aggressive behaviors,
protective to the point of creating fear or actually harming someone
or another animal as he protects. This is bad news, and often a
reason a dog is taken out of the home or destroyed. So, don't allow
your dog to be the King of the Castle, assign him the role of court
jester - he will be happier and so will your family.
What is going on:
- The dog may become more turf protective.
- Strangers may be greeted with barking.
- Barking at noises, birds, cars, butterflies,
pretty much everything he believes worthy of attention.
- Playing with other dogs may escalate to
fighting.
- Same sex confrontation of other dogs can
occur.
- Once again, checking the pack order to see if he
can move up.
What you can do:
Reinforce how to greet strangers into your
home.
Teach your dog to ignore dogs he cannot be nice
to.
Practice or reinforce dog manners (utilizing no
threatening dogs).
Learn to read your dog and other dogs. (circling,
walking on toes, stiff tail wags, tense facial expression - are the
signs of aggressive behaviors)
Rally your family to review that the pack order is
clear and every one is consistent with training and
corrections.
Reward him for good behaviors.
Give the dog another job, therapy work, obedience
classes, agility.
Information provided by International Doodle Owners
Group - IDOG.Biz
copyright 2006
Rosewood Labradoodles
Breeding Australian Labradoodle
puppies for your love and
enjoyment! |