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On May 2 we suffered a devastating house fire. my then-fiance (now husband) Joel jumped through a second-story window and was admitted to the hospital for two days with severe carbon monoxide poisoning.
our beloved dog Baxter didn't make it.
we are absolutely crushed by grief with the loss of Bax. our house is just stuff but Bax was our son! Joel especially is struggling with feelings of guilt that he didn't go back into the house to save him.
I knew the only path forward was though and so I started tentatively poking around rescues. I knew I wanted an adult. Joel knew he needed another rat terrier. enter. Solomon.
We picked him up yesterday and he's already the best boi. very well behaved. only knows sit but he walks decently well on the leash with a martingale. VERY house trained. extremely food motivated.
I have a couple of questions.
in the short 24 hours he's been he's gotten EXTREMELY attached to me. Velcro Dog doesn't begin to describe it. If I'm out of sight he will go into a down with his nose pressed to the door and wait whining completely ignoring Joel. he follows me all over the house. I was off work yesterday as well as today (covid isolation) so I don't mind per se. Joel will be working from home for the foreseeable future to keep him company. I'm just worried I'm setting him up for some separation anxiety when I leave to go to work tomorrow. I'm planning on taking a short shopping trip today to pick him up a tag and a harness for car rides (we have a doggy seat belt for him that I don't want clipping to his collar. YIKES). I worked very hard to foster independence with Bax and while he was attached to me he also loved joel. I'm thinking of playing some it's yer choice games with him etc? again, he's extremely food-motivated. poor little man has no standards and will even do tricks for milk bones. So tips for fostering independence would be nice.
Speaking of training. whooooo boy is he a door dasher. this is a big safety concern for me. As you can see on his shelter page he escaped TWICE in NYC and I have no interest in losing him this time. he even door dashes inside the house (from bedroom to living room etc) trying to get through the door between our legs. I've never been one for the theory that the owner should go through the door first to exert dominance but for this little guy a 'wait' at the door while I go through would be AWESOME. I'm just A. a little unsure on how to train this and B. I don't want to flood the guy with training. he's been here 24 hours. I want him to unwind and adjust. BUT. It is a safety issue so I want to address it ASAP. thoughts?
VERY low on my list of doggy priorities but worth mentioning here is that he does have some barrier frustration. he's an extremely extroverted friendly dog that's great with people and other dogs (he was fostered with multiple other dogs and stayed at a doggy daycare for the last two weeks of his stay) so I'm not worried about aggression but I'd love some tips for reducing barrier frustration when we're out walking. so far it's just exemplified by pulling and barking to get at dogs and pulling to get at people. so far I haven't had treats on our walks and haven't practiced watch me (see previous note on not wanting to start training too soon) so we've just been crossing streets and heading into people's yards to create maximum space and then praising extensively when he redirects away from the target. thoughts on how to do this better?
he starts basic obedience on June 16 and I think he's gonna do great! he truly is a silly goofy lil guy and while it's been really hard ( I wasn't expecting it to be as hard as it was when we first got him) I know he's helping us heal.
our beloved dog Baxter didn't make it.
we are absolutely crushed by grief with the loss of Bax. our house is just stuff but Bax was our son! Joel especially is struggling with feelings of guilt that he didn't go back into the house to save him.
I knew the only path forward was though and so I started tentatively poking around rescues. I knew I wanted an adult. Joel knew he needed another rat terrier. enter. Solomon.
We picked him up yesterday and he's already the best boi. very well behaved. only knows sit but he walks decently well on the leash with a martingale. VERY house trained. extremely food motivated.
I have a couple of questions.
in the short 24 hours he's been he's gotten EXTREMELY attached to me. Velcro Dog doesn't begin to describe it. If I'm out of sight he will go into a down with his nose pressed to the door and wait whining completely ignoring Joel. he follows me all over the house. I was off work yesterday as well as today (covid isolation) so I don't mind per se. Joel will be working from home for the foreseeable future to keep him company. I'm just worried I'm setting him up for some separation anxiety when I leave to go to work tomorrow. I'm planning on taking a short shopping trip today to pick him up a tag and a harness for car rides (we have a doggy seat belt for him that I don't want clipping to his collar. YIKES). I worked very hard to foster independence with Bax and while he was attached to me he also loved joel. I'm thinking of playing some it's yer choice games with him etc? again, he's extremely food-motivated. poor little man has no standards and will even do tricks for milk bones. So tips for fostering independence would be nice.
Speaking of training. whooooo boy is he a door dasher. this is a big safety concern for me. As you can see on his shelter page he escaped TWICE in NYC and I have no interest in losing him this time. he even door dashes inside the house (from bedroom to living room etc) trying to get through the door between our legs. I've never been one for the theory that the owner should go through the door first to exert dominance but for this little guy a 'wait' at the door while I go through would be AWESOME. I'm just A. a little unsure on how to train this and B. I don't want to flood the guy with training. he's been here 24 hours. I want him to unwind and adjust. BUT. It is a safety issue so I want to address it ASAP. thoughts?
VERY low on my list of doggy priorities but worth mentioning here is that he does have some barrier frustration. he's an extremely extroverted friendly dog that's great with people and other dogs (he was fostered with multiple other dogs and stayed at a doggy daycare for the last two weeks of his stay) so I'm not worried about aggression but I'd love some tips for reducing barrier frustration when we're out walking. so far it's just exemplified by pulling and barking to get at dogs and pulling to get at people. so far I haven't had treats on our walks and haven't practiced watch me (see previous note on not wanting to start training too soon) so we've just been crossing streets and heading into people's yards to create maximum space and then praising extensively when he redirects away from the target. thoughts on how to do this better?
he starts basic obedience on June 16 and I think he's gonna do great! he truly is a silly goofy lil guy and while it's been really hard ( I wasn't expecting it to be as hard as it was when we first got him) I know he's helping us heal.