baby backpack with leash image
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I have two: baby-talking to their kids (high-pitched voice is fine.... blabbering like an idiot to them isn't) and telling me how to parent.
Answer
I'm probably gonna get a lot of thumbs down for this...
But my number one would be a baby with a bottle of formula crammed in it's mouth... Makes me sick to my stomach!
Parents who use those stupid backpack leashes
Moms who have really sad and distant looking kids and the moms are "perfect" with salon hair and long fake nails. And you and clearly tell they pay no attantion to their kids
Moms who force 2 and 3 year olds to walk every where and would rather yell at them to hurry up than just pick them up.
and parents who completely ignore their kids who are wreaking what ever establishment they are in.
Sorry I have a lot. Bad parents rrrreally get under my skin...
I'm probably gonna get a lot of thumbs down for this...
But my number one would be a baby with a bottle of formula crammed in it's mouth... Makes me sick to my stomach!
Parents who use those stupid backpack leashes
Moms who have really sad and distant looking kids and the moms are "perfect" with salon hair and long fake nails. And you and clearly tell they pay no attantion to their kids
Moms who force 2 and 3 year olds to walk every where and would rather yell at them to hurry up than just pick them up.
and parents who completely ignore their kids who are wreaking what ever establishment they are in.
Sorry I have a lot. Bad parents rrrreally get under my skin...
How do I train my dog to not chew/eat everything in the house?
Artemis
I am also experiencing difficulties with getting the dog to poop outside. She pees outside just fine, but she won't ever poo outside, it always has to be inside.
The bigger problem is that she chews everything. Even her leashes. She is swallowing the little pieces and its causing her to get sick and throw up. We try our best to keep things out of her reach but she chews EVERYTHING!
Help!
**She is a nine month old female Shiba Inu mixed with a Chihuahua. We recently adopted her.
Answer
There are a couple of strategies (that you can use in tandem).
1. Get Bitter Apple spray. Dogs hate the taste of it. It's alcohol-based, won't stain and wears off in a few hours. Spray it on a shoe or purse and your don't won't touch it.
2. Treat your dog like a little kid. You wouldn't leave marbles or jacks on the floor if you had a baby--the baby would put them in his mouth and swallow them. Well, keep the stuff that your dog shouldn't chew out of reach. Shoes go in the closet and close it. Hang things up. Yeah, it's a nuisance but it means the dog doesn't develop a taste for shoes.
3. A bored dog resorts to chewing. So do a couple of things. Give that dog a workout. Lots of walks. Go jogging or roller blading with your dog. Put a doggie backpack on your dog to have them carry a bit more weight on a walk. Do performance sports (agility, flyball, weight pulls, rally-o). Take classes. Train your dog a new trick every couple of days (mental stimulation is also important). A dog that gets a workout and mental challenges is a dog that doesn't engage in destructive behavior. A tired dog is a good dog. A mentally stimulated dog is a content dog. Exercise tires the dog. Tricks, activities or a job of some sort stimulates the dog mentally. A bored or restless dog will engage in destructive behavior (chewing things he shouldn't, shredding toilet paper, emptying waste baskets, trying to get up on tables).
4. Give your dog lots of good things to chew: rawhides of various sizes and shapes, greenies, Kongs stuffed with peanut butter, beef marrow bones, rope toys. We have a dog that loves to chew but he never chews stuff he shouldn't--he's always got something that is okay for him to chew on available so he's not tempted to go for shoes, pursues or other similar items.
There are a couple of strategies (that you can use in tandem).
1. Get Bitter Apple spray. Dogs hate the taste of it. It's alcohol-based, won't stain and wears off in a few hours. Spray it on a shoe or purse and your don't won't touch it.
2. Treat your dog like a little kid. You wouldn't leave marbles or jacks on the floor if you had a baby--the baby would put them in his mouth and swallow them. Well, keep the stuff that your dog shouldn't chew out of reach. Shoes go in the closet and close it. Hang things up. Yeah, it's a nuisance but it means the dog doesn't develop a taste for shoes.
3. A bored dog resorts to chewing. So do a couple of things. Give that dog a workout. Lots of walks. Go jogging or roller blading with your dog. Put a doggie backpack on your dog to have them carry a bit more weight on a walk. Do performance sports (agility, flyball, weight pulls, rally-o). Take classes. Train your dog a new trick every couple of days (mental stimulation is also important). A dog that gets a workout and mental challenges is a dog that doesn't engage in destructive behavior. A tired dog is a good dog. A mentally stimulated dog is a content dog. Exercise tires the dog. Tricks, activities or a job of some sort stimulates the dog mentally. A bored or restless dog will engage in destructive behavior (chewing things he shouldn't, shredding toilet paper, emptying waste baskets, trying to get up on tables).
4. Give your dog lots of good things to chew: rawhides of various sizes and shapes, greenies, Kongs stuffed with peanut butter, beef marrow bones, rope toys. We have a dog that loves to chew but he never chews stuff he shouldn't--he's always got something that is okay for him to chew on available so he's not tempted to go for shoes, pursues or other similar items.
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Title Post: What's your biggest pet peeve to see other parents doing?
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Rating: 96% based on 987 ratings. 4,7 user reviews.
Author: Unknown
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
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