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Hi need some advice I have an 11 month old saluki x grey and he keeps biting my feet when we are out walking and his teeth are bleeding sharp and it hurts and getting really fed up of it , I have given him no reason to fear feet, tell him no sternly whenever he does it and he will either be fine for rest of the walk or will do it again in 5 minutes he isn't aggressive , seems to be when he's really excited, he has been out on lamp last week but didn't slip him on anything as to tight to the hedge am going Wednesday I don't know if its because he is getting frustrated as he wants to start hunting but I'm no genius so any advice is greatly appreciated.

Atb

Tom

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I would have thought that his feet are stinging due to him being young and his pads are still soft and the nettles are biting well at the moment .......

Would this make him bite my feet which is what he's doing?

Lol sorry mate I thought you said he was biting his own feet :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: ...........

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What you have in the pup is a carry on from the pups earlier stage where it was stimulated by everything and acted immediately on stimulated

 

Your feet are the nearest thing to a prey model in the pups mind, it feels energised when out and is acting on that energy without having focus for the real thing ,

The more you take the pup out the less interest it will show in you and start getting a feel for the real thing , it will grow out of it

I congratulate you on still having a pup focused on you at that stage , most pups have long since turned away from owners and aren't comfortable in that space ,

A tug item would be a great addition to your training if the pup is still hugely focused on you and you want to train commands ,

Best of luck

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Spot on Casso. I find that very highly driven dogs are the most likely to behave like this. I have a Saluki lurcher who is a very mouthy dog, always grabbing at other dogs, my hands, the lead etc. He has to be kept occupied all the time or his drive overcomes all the learning of manners he's ever had. Directing that drive on to something that isn't your body is the key.

 

What the dog is trying to tell you is that it really needs stuff to chase, grab etc. So yes, playing tug, with strict rules on how the dog plays with you, is the way to go. I've sent you a pm.

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