I finished up with a client on Saturday that I haven’t seen in a while. He is now almost twelve months old and is doing extremely well in all the basic areas that are most important to puppy guardians. He walks well on the leash (he has his moments around other dogs), he comes when he is called, he stops when asked and he understands how to learn. I was putting him through the paces at the beginning of the session to see where my clients needed some final guidance and to assess how to structure the session.
“Sit, Good Boy! Down, Stay . . . Come!, Down, Good Boy!” After approximately ten behaviors I gave him a treat. “Ouch!” He nailed my fingers in a painful crushing bite.
I did not remember him having a rough mouth when I worked with him as a young puppy many months ago so I asked his guardians if they toss treats or food to him. Sure enough, they started working on it as a fun “trick” and did not think anything of it until now.
Puppies are not motivated to have a tentative, “soft mouth” unless they are constantly reminded as early as possible to do so. This consistent message should continue well past their first birthday or until you are absolutely sure that your puppy’s default bite is tentative, measured and consistent.
I do not recommend tossing food or treats for puppies until they are consistently gentle with their mouth around food or toys.
Soft Mouth Exercise
For my clients I always recommend using at least one meal per day as a training session to help them stay consistent with their training schedule. This is an ideal time to work on a puppy biting prevention exercise with your puppy.
Basic
Advanced
Once your puppy has a gentle mouth with the basic exercise you can move to the next level
Troubleshooting
See this exercise and more in my high-quality Puppy Biting Video and stop painful puppy biting. Ouch!