JesDaMom
Posted : 3/31/2014 5:54:40 PM
JackieG - So summarizing parts of Fuller & Scotts book is Clarence Pfaffenbergers book "The New Knowledge of Dog Behavior" where he goes through his passion to find the perfect Guide Dog and working/observing/taking information from Scott & Fullers study. And I'm kind of in disbelieve or more so disheartened by Pfaffenbergers STRONG conclusions about a puppy's critical stages.
"A puppy who has had no socialization before it is sixteen weeks of age has little chance of becoming the sort of dog that any one of us would want as a companion. Playing with the litter has some socializing effect, but it misses the important things: the development of the individual as a companion, and as an individual with self-confidence." (Pfaffenberger, The New Knowledge of Dog Behavior, Ch 9, P 131)
"Many buyers wonder why the four or five month old puppy they buy never seems to care much about them. The emotional side of the puppy goes along with his physical and mental development in a parallel course. By sixteen weeks of age all of these important developments are fixed in the way that they will continue through life. It is very difficult to gain the affection of an older puppy. Because the puppy needs someone to turn to for affection and guidance between four weeks and sixteen weeks of age, the person who finally substitutes for his mother in his life becomes very important to him and should take over as the puppy's mother gives up her duties, or, if convenient, make the transition gradual. In the time, at three weeks of age, when the learning stage began, to sixteen weeks of age, the character of a dog is formed. No matter how good his inherited character traits, if they are not given a chance of expression during this period he will never be as good a dog as he could have been. There is no way one can go back and make up to a dog in later life the things he failed to do for him at this age." (Pfaffenberger, The New Knowledge of Dog Behavior, Ch 8, P 119)
"The time is so short - from twenty one to one hundred and twelve days in all - and once it is gone it can never be retrieved. The implications of what this short time means in the development of a dog are so great that it well behooves puppy raisers to employ this time wisely. It can never be made up at an older age." (Pfaffenberger, The New Knowledge of Dog Behavior, Ch 9, P 132)
WOW! Some bold statements...