catembi
Well-Known Member
Really hope that someone can help.
Our Rottie puppy Milly is now a year old & still chews up possessions, & it's getting to be quite a problem. Clothes, horse grooming brushes, a haynet, my filofax, o/h's wallet, shoes, the doormat, my watch, her collar (which Trev the horse kindly pulled off...), plants in pots...
She is so quick at getting things. The obvious solution is to put all things in another room & shut the door, & put everything that's in a pot in the greenhouse...but what about things like the doormat...? It's a doormat, so it has to go outside the door, but I can't keep replacing it every time it gets mauled.
The older Rottie, Kane, is a rescue, I've had him since rising 3, he is now 6 & he has never chewed or taken a single thing (except stealing food...) that isn't his in the whole time I've had him.
Their routine is: run around the yard for an hour in the morning, o/h lets out at lunch, then he is home at around 4 & lets them out for exercise in the yard, then they have a walk or play with the football in the horses' field. They are always left with at least one chew toy or a snack ball.
Please someone tell me that she will grow out of this as she has got hold of some things that can't be replaced, & it's depressing that one lapse of vigilance can lead to something else being wrecked.
And a photo of the two of them on a day trip to Norfolk. You can see one of many holes that they dug in the background! Puppy at the front.
T x
Our Rottie puppy Milly is now a year old & still chews up possessions, & it's getting to be quite a problem. Clothes, horse grooming brushes, a haynet, my filofax, o/h's wallet, shoes, the doormat, my watch, her collar (which Trev the horse kindly pulled off...), plants in pots...
She is so quick at getting things. The obvious solution is to put all things in another room & shut the door, & put everything that's in a pot in the greenhouse...but what about things like the doormat...? It's a doormat, so it has to go outside the door, but I can't keep replacing it every time it gets mauled.
The older Rottie, Kane, is a rescue, I've had him since rising 3, he is now 6 & he has never chewed or taken a single thing (except stealing food...) that isn't his in the whole time I've had him.
Their routine is: run around the yard for an hour in the morning, o/h lets out at lunch, then he is home at around 4 & lets them out for exercise in the yard, then they have a walk or play with the football in the horses' field. They are always left with at least one chew toy or a snack ball.
Please someone tell me that she will grow out of this as she has got hold of some things that can't be replaced, & it's depressing that one lapse of vigilance can lead to something else being wrecked.
And a photo of the two of them on a day trip to Norfolk. You can see one of many holes that they dug in the background! Puppy at the front.
T x