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I have a friend who in a fit of loneness has bought a dog. He is very
good with the dog walks it, looks after it He lives in a apartment and in Australia you are not allowed to keep a dog in an apartment. If his landlord finds out he will be kicked out. My friends job requires him to go on trips about once every couple months for about a week at a time. I have offered to look after his dog but I have a German Shepard his dog is a small fox terrier. They get on fine have and seem to have a lot of fun, EXCEPT 1. When I am close by. 2. Meal times. I have tried putting two plates far away from each other but they both want the same plate at the same time. Tips suggestions gratefully accepted |
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Rob spoke these words of wisdom in news:uO8hk.21526
: I have a friend who in a fit of loneness has bought a dog. He is very good with the dog walks it, looks after it He lives in a apartment and in Australia you are not allowed to keep a dog in an apartment. If his landlord finds out he will be kicked out. My friends job requires him to go on trips about once every couple months for about a week at a time. I have offered to look after his dog but I have a German Shepard his dog is a small fox terrier. They get on fine have and seem to have a lot of fun, EXCEPT 1. When I am close by. 2. Meal times. I have tried putting two plates far away from each other but they both want the same plate at the same time. Tips suggestions gratefully accepted Crate them during meal time. Both are also resource guarding YOU. Terriers tend to be very dog aggressive so i would watch them carefully, always avoiding any event that may trigger aggression. |
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diddy none said in rec.pets.dogs.behavior:
Crate them during meal time. Both are also resource guarding YOU. Terriers tend to be very dog aggressive so i would watch them carefully, always avoiding any event that may trigger aggression. Good advice, though I'd suggest two different rooms because 1. The dog in a crate is still a competitor 2. My understanding is that crates are rarely used in Australia. -- --Matt. Rocky's a Dog. |
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"Rob" wrote in message ... I have a friend who in a fit of loneness has bought a dog. He is very good with the dog walks it, looks after it He lives in a apartment and in Australia you are not allowed to keep a dog in an apartment. If his landlord finds out he will be kicked out. My friends job requires him to go on trips about once every couple months for about a week at a time. I have offered to look after his dog but I have a German Shepard his dog is a small fox terrier. They get on fine have and seem to have a lot of fun, EXCEPT 1. When I am close by. 2. Meal times. I have tried putting two plates far away from each other but they both want the same plate at the same time. Tips suggestions gratefully accepted ============== My daughter has two Pugs that play together and are also best friends. But, one of the Pugs eats very, very slowly, and the other Pug inhales his food. When the fast-eating Pug goes near the slow-eating Pug, the slow-eating Pug attacks the other Pug. Neither has ever bitten each other; just a lot of noise and wrestling. So, my daughter always has to place the slow-eating Pug in his crate to eat his meal times, and he likes it like that. He is let out as soon as he finishes his meal. If you have no crate, just place them in separate rooms, or put one outside on a porch, etc. to eat and leave one inside to eat. I would also suggest having your GS do everything first; first to get his food; first to go outside; first to get in the car, first to receive a treat and first to receive a pat, etc. I would be very careful to protect the terrier when both dogs are near you, since your GS seems to be guarding you. I would not pat or allow the little terrier to be close to you when the GS is nearby. I would only give them treats when they are separated. Those would be my suggestions |
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The simplest solution to the feeding problem is to feed them -- at the same
time -- in different rooms. Or feed one inside and one outside (switch them at every feeding). When they're out of sight of, and physically separated from, each other, the empty belly takes care of any lingering thoughts about what the other has in his bowl. ![]() Chuck "Rob" wrote in message ... I have a friend who in a fit of loneness has bought a dog. He is very good with the dog walks it, looks after it He lives in a apartment and in Australia you are not allowed to keep a dog in an apartment. If his landlord finds out he will be kicked out. My friends job requires him to go on trips about once every couple months for about a week at a time. I have offered to look after his dog but I have a German Shepard his dog is a small fox terrier. They get on fine have and seem to have a lot of fun, EXCEPT 1. When I am close by. 2. Meal times. I have tried putting two plates far away from each other but they both want the same plate at the same time. Tips suggestions gratefully accepted |
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