Dear Cathy,
We have a three-year-old Chiweenie (Chihuahua/Dachshund mix). As a puppy, she was abused and kept in a small cage. We brought her home at eight-months-old.
When we put her down on the floor, she took off running around the house and was so excited she ran until she collapsed. We are still having trouble keeping her from bolting out of the yard every time the gate opens and are afraid she will get hit or hurt.
What can we do to get her to stop? We have other dogs, but they don’t try to leave the yard; only Mollie does this. — Mollie’s Mom, Muldrow, OK
Dear Mollie’s Mom,
Mollie’s confinement as a puppy might have contributed to her initial need to run around your house, but I don’t think her current energy levels are related to her confined puppyhood. My guess is, her previous owners had a hard time managing her energy, too, and may have kept her confined because of it. It’s not uncommon for pet owners to give up on high-energy dogs.
These dogs need people, like you, who are willing to find gentle ways to manage their enthusiastic personalities.
Here are a few things that might help.
First, high-energy dogs need a lot of exercise. Backyard time does not count. In a multi-dog home, dogs might play with each other — and that helps, but they often don’t expend enough of their reserves. You can learn to play games with Mollie, like fetch, or take her to the dog park where meeting new dogs and running around can help.
The simplest thing, however, almost any pet owner can do for their dog is take them for a walk twice a day for at least 20 minutes each time. (Work her up to this time if she is not used to the activity.)
Second, begin shaping calming behaviors by rewarding your dog for standing still, sitting, and laying down. Use a training clicker (available at pet stores) to “click” and mark the behavior as soon as it happens, then give your dog a treat.
Mollie may get a little excited at first and break her calm behavior when you click, but eventually, she will learn the “click” means a reward is coming for the calm behavior. Once Mollie understands you can pair words like “chill out” or “calm down” with the behavior so you can control when the calm behaviors occur.
Finally, begin training “wait,” which is also a calming behavior. Put food on the floor in front of Mollie and ask her to “wait” or “leave it.” Hold a treat in your hand, which will make her sit still in anticipation. When she “sits” and “waits,” click and give her the treat from your hand. Then pick up the food from the floor. (Never let her eat food off the floor.)
“Wait” training with food can shape other behaviors, like waiting at a door or gate. Put a leash on Mollie and ask her to sit as you open a door or gate. If she breaks the sit command, close the door/gate.
Repeat this training for several weeks until you can open a gate or door, walk through it, and she remains sitting on the original side.
If you are committed, you can reshape her behavior over time, which may take weeks or months. Until then, supervise her outside and make sure she has an ID tag and microchip, just in case.
Dear Cathy,
Here is another suggestion for Wendy Rutland in Pensacola, Fla., for handling a cat pooping in her yard. She might try putting some coffee grounds or some other scented substance in the garden areas. We have feral cats in our neighborhood that like to poop in our mulch, and these scents seem to distract them. — Tom Schreiber, Hellertown, PA
Dear Tom,
While Wendy’s problem was a cat pooping in her yard, your suggestions for keeping cats out of garden beds are very good. One scent that cats don’t like is citrus, so some people will put orange or lemon peels in their garden beds to keep cats away.
You also can install motion-detector sprinklers to keep cats out of the yard or garden bed. Or spread pinecones over the mulch or push popsicle sticks into the soil roughly two to three inches apart, so they stick out an inch or two above ground. These humane solutions create undesirable areas for outdoor cats to walk in and relieve themselves.