Get your daughter to put his food down, stand beside it and then pick it up, if he shows his teeth tell him no, if he snaps push him on his side and hold him down. Don't be violent be dominant.
This should be started as soon as you get a pup and it never becomes a problem and normally only takes a few NO's.
To have a dog like that out, and of the lead without a muzzle, he needs putting down aswell as the dog.
What if you was on your own pissed up wobbling home from the pub.
Weekenders are a ####### nightmare round my way,sat-sun I go further afield to avoid the hyped up nutcases.
The first thing they always seem to say is
he/she has never done that before.....
A lot of bullfinches were lost last year in Ireland.
Everyone I spoke to had lost Bullies or new someone that had.
So probably just the same over hear.
It works well with most birds, if there not doing it on there own.
The method I use with bullfinches (new pairings) separate with wire in flight/double breeder until they are showing signs (feeding hen and so on)if she is still not interested,remove cock from eye/ear shot for the day.
Next day put it in with the hen, and most of the time she will present her self in a matter of minutes. If not repeat the process
But with breeding nothings guaranteed.
Fuji
there as crisp and sharp as the picture above,I've no pictures, me son and granddaughter us them snowboarding but the quality is so good on the gopro that a lot of professionals are using them for wildlife/motosport filming/photos.
If your not great with a camera, but won't photos like the one above, get a gopro, you can film your dog, then you can change any part, or all into photos.
If your not rendering for the time being,I would blackjack the inside to stop the damp (if it's single skin) and to save on heating costs,50mm insulation on walls floor and ceiling ,eml and render inside,not ply if you have destructive dogs.