the_gopher
Posted : 6/18/2008 5:41:31 AM
The last thing I would take away is a chew toy, especially her
favorite one that she will really have a decent chew session on. We were thinking of just her stuffed animals....but maybe this won't be necessary. I did
suspect that maybe she is chewing heavily due to teething. I would
have hoped she would have learned bite inhibition by now - due to
staying with at least one littermate till 10 weeks of age (plus three
adult dogs in the house who do not tolerate misbehaving puppies).
I
did notice some new teeth this morning (oh joy lol) and I will give the
washcloth under HEAVY supervision a shot (or she will eat it no doubt
in my mind about that!). Right know she has a Kong, but I will pick up a buster cube and give that a go as well.
This morning we worked a little more
on watch me and down. She got rowdy during a play session and I had to
go through her entire box of toys to find a toy she wanted more than my
clothing or skin. But I found one and praised the living heck out of
her when she started tugging on the toy and the retrieved it for me. I feel like I have to be careful not to get too excited in my praise because I find she gets too excited and focuses back on biting me instead of the toy 
I think after reading losinsusans post we'll start taking her out for walks more and see if there is a class around here that will let her in (the ones I checked want her to be older and/or fully vaccinated). I'll start that though once we got this poop thing under control and the fecal sample the vet took comes back (which should be today). We'll live a bit more dangerously to wipe her out (though she does sleep quite a bit already)...but I DO love her when she is pooped and dreamy eyed and gentle. I want more of that and if it means risking a bit before her series of shots are over - then I think it's worth it. I just worry because we live nearby to some woods with wild animals and she is a major grass eater...EVERYTHING goes in the mouth and frantic humans pull it out before she swallows it - but grass is hard to get all the way out. I wish I could let her off leash, but I don't trust her. She typically wants to be close but I'm afraid with all the distractions outside she'll wander off and run away. We haven't started on recall yet and until we get past this biting phase I doubt we'd be able to make any progress in that area.
We also need to work on leash manners. She is mostly good on the leash till she decides she wants to play tug with it. I was thinking of trying out a harness with her to see if that is better. But I'm not familiar with harnesses at all - never used them.
I took a long nap yesterday (my SO took over puppy duties) and he woke up purposely before her midnight (well 2am) potty break so the alarm would not wake me up so I slept through the night. I feel like a different person than the one who posted this yesterday totally frustrated and crying (yes I was crying b/c I want to play with her but when play session inevitably ends up with her going after my body and I can't distract her it's not fun and frustrating, couple that with lack of sleep and I was just a wreck). I'd had hoped I would be able to adjust to less sleep but apparently this human needs to nap more herself.
Despite all this I love the little bugger to death and really do look forward to figure out what works with her and what doesn't - and how we both need to communicate with each other. I don't mind a challenge it's just the biting thing has frayed on my nerves and I'm working to calm myself, in order to calm and redirect her better.