Need advice badly

lrh

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#1
A brief outline of the daily attention our dog gets, which has been true for the last 6 months: Walking: 3 Miles around 8 AM, 3 Miles around 5PM, 2 Miles around 9 PM. Play time for about 20 minutes at 830 PM, or whenever we finish dinner. He maybe spends about an hour per day outside on a leash, or sometimes we let him run free, but there are a lot of foxes/coyotes around, so we dont' really like to unless he is with his black lab friend. Now, the problem:

Our westie is 8 months old. Until about three weeks ago, he barked maybe once per day. However, he has learned a new trick, which is to bark until he gets what he wants. At 6 AM he starts barking so I will let him out. He'll be happy for an hour or so, then he starts barking again until we let him in. Then he'll come inside and bark at us while we sleep until we take him for a walk. Finally, we take him for a walk and we go to work. When we get home from work between five and six, its another 3 mile walk, then when we get home, he stares at us and barks until we let him out on his leash. Then we eat dinner and he will sit patiently while we eat, then once we sit on the couch, he sits and stares at us and barks. One of us will play with him until he gets bored, then it is a 20 minute walk around 930 or 10 pm, and once we get home, he will sit and bark until we go to bed.

A few notes: 1. this is very new behavior. 2. Ignoring him doesn't work. He will literally bark repeatedly for 20 minutes at a time. 3. We have tenants upstairs who can hear him while he barks, so just ignoring him won't work. 4. I think it may be separation anxiety, because until recently, he was normally not left alone for more than 5 hours at a time, but now it is more like 8 at a time, and i feel as though he spends the whole time sleeping, then when we are home expects constant attention. 5. I feel as though 8 miles a day of walking is plenty of exercise for a 14 pound dog---is it too much, i mean, is he in "too good of shape" and therefore has unreasonably high energy levels?
6. the goal is to be able to train him to be a dog who is like the one we knew until just a few weeks ago---the one who was tired and calm between the hours of 9 PM and 9 AM.

Finally, does anyone have any specific ideas or advice as to what we can do to correct and stop this behavior?
 

Charliesmommy

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#2
Goodness. 8 miles a day is a TON of exercise. I'm not sure how he's able to stay awake at all after that!

It sounds like he has you trained very very well. Obviously, the best thing to do is to ignore him. Eventually he will figure out that barking does not get him what he wants. But in the meantime your tenants might get very upset!

The only other suggestion I have (and I saw this on TV) is to teach him "speak" and that he is only to "speak" on command. And to interrupt his barking at all other times by doing something like shaking a can of pennies. Now, I can't really tell you how to go about doing this - because the lady on tv did it in like 5 minutes without really demonstrating much.

Sorry, I'm not much help.....just throwing ideas out there....
 

Herschel

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#3
A few notes: 1. this is very new behavior. 2. Ignoring him doesn't work. He will literally bark repeatedly for 20 minutes at a time. 3. We have tenants upstairs who can hear him while he barks, so just ignoring him won't work. 4. I think it may be separation anxiety, because until recently, he was normally not left alone for more than 5 hours at a time, but now it is more like 8 at a time, and i feel as though he spends the whole time sleeping, then when we are home expects constant attention. 5. I feel as though 8 miles a day of walking is plenty of exercise for a 14 pound dog---is it too much, i mean, is he in "too good of shape" and therefore has unreasonably high energy levels?
6. the goal is to be able to train him to be a dog who is like the one we knew until just a few weeks ago---the one who was tired and calm between the hours of 9 PM and 9 AM.

Finally, does anyone have any specific ideas or advice as to what we can do to correct and stop this behavior?

Ignore it. Talk to your tenants upstairs and explain that you are training him not to bark.

-If he barks to get out of his crate, ignore him. If he's quiet for 5 minutes, let him out and give him a ton of praise.

-When he wants to go out, make him Sit, then Down. Let him know that he has to work for rewards and that he can't demand them.

-If he wants to come back inside, either tell him from inside to "Sit" before you open the door or ignore his barking until he is quiet. Then let him inside.

-If he wants you to take him for a walk, have him work for it. Make him learn a trick or something and have him perform it before every walk. You need to show him that he has to do something for you before you do something for him.
 

Tazwell

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#4
Ignoring him will have to work. You can NEVER give him what he wants when he is barking. You can, however, teach him to "Quiet." For this, you'll need to teach him to speak, or wait for him to start barking. You say "Quiet!" and give a distraction so that he'll stop, and as soon as he stops, give lots of praise. I've found that the command goes well with a big hand/arm/body gesture, too.

Eventually, you can say quiet, and he'll stop-- then he may start again, and you quiet him again. You might do this over and over, until he gives up, then when he's relaxed, you give him what he wants.

The most important thing is to NEVER give him what he wants when he's barking! Let me tell you, my mom did that with her dachshund, and our house is a MADHOUSE when that dog wants something!
 

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