Puppies
jumping up are a very natural thing that they do when they are little – to get
attention – and in the wild to get fed by licking the Mother’s face to encourage
food to be regurgitated. Showing your puppy that it does not get attention when
it jumps is something that you should encourage from a very early age. Often it
can seem like fun when a puppy is very small but when your dog grows to 35kg
and can jump 5 foot high it is not so funny anymore.

If
your puppy is jumping up, simply turn and walk away. Ignore your puppy, no eye
contact, no speaking and no touching. Continue to ignore and then after your
puppy has calmed down, wait for 5 minutes and then call your puppy to you. If
your puppy does not stop then isolate your puppy by either leaving the room or
by putting the puppy in another room.
Puppy Jumping
Up on Visitors:

Puppy
jumping up at you when you are getting ready for the walk:
Put
the leash down and wait for 10 minutes or until your puppy is calm, then try
again. This is important and although you are keen to go for a walk you should
not rush it!
Relevant
Ideas:
It
is really necessary not to speak – to stay calm and not say a word when your
puppy jumps up. Remember your puppy is an attention-seeking machine!
Space Jumping
Your
puppy's jumping up and space invading is not its way of saying I love you!! Space
is very important to a dog and if she can invade yours whenever she wants then
she will lose respect for you.
How
would you feel if a human constantly invaded your space! It is more similar
than you think!! Start as you mean to go on. When your puppy is calm then you
can call her and pick her up for a cuddle.
When
you are ignoring your puppy keep your arms folded and walk past the puppy
confidently and assertively.
The
two most common mistakes:
·
Inconsistency - sometimes
puppy jumping up is given attention!
·
People make
eye contact
- This invites your puppy over, so do not make eye contact, focus on something
else.
Another
trick that will help is to train your puppy to sit for everything! If you can
get your puppy to practise lots of "sits" then her default behaviour
will simply be to sit when you call her, and not jump!
For
more information on puppy training then check The
Online Dog Trainer it is a great source of fascinating information that
covers off everything you need to know about raising a happy puppy using
videos. CLICK HERE.
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