Benedict
Posted : 2/20/2007 8:46:09 AM
I hear stories like that all the time, but I find it very hard to relate to them.
Ben is 10.5 months old. To date, he has chewed a rather bad book on dog training, 2 laptop power supply cords and a high heeled shoe. Oh, and all of my remote controls have teethmarks. Every single one of those casualties was MY FAULT. My dog does not chew to spite me - he chews because it is in his nature to do so and *I* left something tempting in a place he could get at it.
Ben gets appropriate chew toys, a lot of exercise and mental stimulation and I keep my belongings out of the way if I want them to remain intact. With those boundaries in place then no, he doesn't destroy anything. All of the above items were chewed months ago, now he seems to have grown out of it to a large extent.
Unlike other lab owners I have heard/talked to, my drywall is still in one piece, the few carpets I have in my house are fine, and Ben has not eaten my dining table. (That really happened to someone I spoke to.) The idea that labs are more destructive than other dogs is a myth to me. The problem, I think, lies in a lab's exercise requirements. They are active dogs and when they can't burn off all that energy through walks/fetch/swimming/any other appropriate activity, they will find a way to do it themselves.
Kate