Eating Behavior/Hesitation

    • Puppy

    Eating Behavior/Hesitation

    Feeding/Eating Behavior Question
    Background:
    7 year old, in tact male golden.  With 2nd owner (2 years now), previous owner relinq after 5 years and introducing 2 dominant german shepherds - fight/injury experiences + increasing health expenses.  Current environment has always had another dog and he has no hesitations with other dogs, more a follower than a leader, but no signs of fear or anxiety; social. 
    Health:
    Currently being treated for thyroid/joint inflammation and dental condition is closely monitored.
    Eating Experience: Can eat around other dogs, but process and consistency of getting him to eat is confusing to handlers.  Change in environment or person feeding (all known/trusted people involved) will lead to starting the process (as follows) all over. 

    The process is: he will typically not begin eating before the other dogs and food bowls are placed a few feet apart in all feeding scenarios.  He lays down and if food is presented to him by bowl, he will sniff and turn/walk away.  If food is presented to him while he is laying down, after sniffing and waiting, he will begin accepting food in this method (balls of wet food with some kibble, can increase the proportion of kibble to wet increasingly).  Some meals are fed entirely in this method, some will allow for the remaining portion to be delivered in his bowl where he will stand and eat (there seems to be a higher frequency correlation if the male of the household feeds him).  All scenarios, he will pause, walk away/circle the area and begin again (self regulation?).

    Just hoping to gather some ideas on how those of you might perceive this information with your expertise.

    Thank you!

     

    • Gold Top Dog

    I don't have any expert insight into why he goes through the process you describe.  If it were my dog, and if I felt it was a problem, I'd probably feed him separately from the other dogs.  Completely out of sight from the other dogs and I'd feed him in a crate.  If he didn't eat his meal within ten minutes, I'd remove it and offer food again at the next normal feeding time. 

    I could speculate about why he might be doing this and it could be related to some sort of resource guarding or insecurity but it's often impossible to give any sort of accurate assessment from a brief history and description.  He may have been harshly (in his mind) corrected for eating before he was released by command.  He could just be a dog that has developed a bit of a strange feeding behavior for reasons you may never fully understand.

     

    • Gold Top Dog

     We were talking about something similar on the bichon forum recently, and someone found this in The Whole Dog Journal.  Paraphrased, not direct quote:

     

     Some dogs are uncomfortable to eat in the open or near a pack member.  In the wild, pack members fight over food and pull it far away from other pack members.  The article said that one clue is if your dog picks up a mouthful of food and moves to another location to eat it.  This indicates discomfort with the location of the food bowl.  Mattie does this!  So, I started putting her food bowl in another part of the kitchen, away from Sassy.  Guess what?  She ate all her food and did it right there: no moving it away and she ate it more quickly than I've seen her do before.  So, if you have a "picky eater" try feeding them away from pack members (that includes you, by the way).  If there are no other pack members, try feeding in a more protected spot, like below the kitchen table (no kidding)!  I hope this helps some of you who have reluctant eaters.