Dog Secrets

Many people own dogs, they are the most popular pet in US as well as any other countries. Generally speaking, taking care of a dog is regarded as a simple task. You feed it, give it a bath if it gets dirty, walk it and let it get exercise and love it as you would any other member of your family. Most dog owners regularly take their pet to the veterinarian, clip their claws, brush their coats and provide them with a warm bed to sleep in at night. These things seem so simple – but there are other dog secrets that are really important to know. These things can lengthen the life of your pet as well as keeping them healthier and happier.

The first important dog secret is that dog food is not always the healthiest thing to feed your dog. Many dog food manufacturers cover up for the fact that the things that they list as the ingredients of the food are not the most accurate. The main reason that they can get away with these lies is because the manufacturer only is obligated to list the ingredients that they themselves added to the food. The chemicals and antibiotics that have been fed to the meat prior to its purchase by the dog food companies are not required to be disclosed in the ingredient list. Additionally, the animals that the meat comes from can come from a very questionable origin – euthanized animals, dead, dying and disease zoo and farm animals, just to name a few. A dog should eat the same healthy food that you feed your family, something that the dog food companies do not want people to know, a big dog food secret.

The other big secret is that when you kiss your dog on the lips, your dog is at a much greater risk of catching something from you than you are from him/her! Although dogs do frequently sniff other dogs’ behinds and their feces, your chances of catching a bacteria of some kind from kissing your dog’s lips is very slim. On the other hand, dogs can be very susceptible to many human ailments – especially tuberculosis. So next time you think about kissing your dog on the lips, reconsider, remembering this important dog secret!

? About the author The author is an expert? F r dog and the dog food secrets secret.

Dog Training – Stop the Begging!

Tastes among humans differ, but one thing is constant: your dog will eat just about anything off the table you give it. That may be fine when it’s just you and the family. But when you have guests over, it can be embarrassing. Here are some tips for how to get pooch to stay away during meal time.

The first step is not to start a bad habit.

Dog’s have a natural hierarchy with the alpha at the top, followed by the beta, and so on. In the wild, the alpha eats first, then food is shared by the rest – once the alpha ‘gives permission’. Permission can be denied with a growl or a snap of the teeth.

When you act as the alpha – as you should at all times where your dog is concerned – you control access to the food. But being too easy going gives the signal that it’s open season at the table. If you don’t start the habit they may start it for you, but it doesn’t pay to encourage them.

The next step is to be consistent. If you don’t want the dog to beg for food, don’t feed it sometimes, then deny it at others. The dog has no way in advance to know which times are appropriate and which aren’t. You’ll become frustrated at having to repeatedly try to make the distinction for him and order him away.

Dogs operate by scent. When they smell food, that’s a signal to approach. If you allow them to act on that, a pleasant experience (for them) becomes a bad habit (from your perspective) very quickly.

Human food is often less than ideal for dogs anyway. Most of it is digestible, but it isn’t balanced for dogs the way commercial dog food is. The ideal dog diet depends on a carefully controlled mixture of fat, protein and other categories of food. The percentages are tested and blended by commercial dog food manufacturers. There’s no way for you to duplicate that at the dinner table.

You can train your dog not to beg for food basically the same way you would train them to perform any other desired behavior. Try voice commands ‘go’, ‘sit’ and the rest. This is not the time, however, to reward obedience with a treat, since that’s counterproductive. It only reinforces the link between food and behavior at the wrong time.

If voice commands prove inadequate, you can try leash training. This may require some creativity if you are already at the table. You can wrap a leash around a sturdy pole in the dining room. As you tug on the leash toward you, if it’s wrapped around the pole, it pulls the dog away. Take care not to bruise the dog’s throat by getting carried away.

If you have help, you can sit at the table and start to eat, while another holds the dog a few feet away by the leash. As the dog starts to come toward the table, you give the command and they tug the leash. Dogs learn quickly this way to associate the verbal command with the physical restraint.

As with any training exercise, patience and persistence are essential. But sooner or later, they will respond, even when they smell food. They learn in the wild, they can learn even more easily in the home.