Ad blocker detected: Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker on our website.
Went to Bass Pro Shops on Saturday and bought a new Ambasssadeur "Record" reel to use for pike and stripers. I took it out of the box and placed it on my dining room table. I came home yesterday to learn that my black lab Koho (the hockey company not the salmon), had grabbed the reel from the table and chewed the rubber knobs off!
Now don't blame the dog. after all, you left the reel on the table in the first place. Reminds me of a guy I used to work with, he left his partial denture on the table while taking a nap. His dog thought it was a neat chew toy.
Pints is right. Anything a dog chews is always your (by your I mean the humans) fault for leaving it there. A ladt at work said her husband smacked there puppy hard because it chewed their sons playstation cables. She oddly seemed humoured that it sat by the window trembling for 45 minutes. I basically gently bitched her out for that. How is the puppy supposed to know.
Would you smack a baby hard because it through it's drink on the ground? How can you punish something for doing something it knows nothing about.
Now, if you always had reels lying around and had trained it not to touch then it's bad doggy.
Look at the bright side; now you get to go back shopping at Bass Pro.
(Sorry if I got heated, not intended to you more like the lady from work...)
I fully subscribe to the theory that if a dog chews on some item, it's my fault for leaving it around where he can get to it. The reel can be fixed. This is my 4th lab and I've lost numerous items to the other three.
You're right about the scent business. I leave my hockey equipment in my garage after a game to dry out. I would say Koho has rumaged through my hockey bag six different times to find my mouthguard and chew it up...including a $150 piece that I had custom made after I got my front teeth knocked out!
I suscribe to the Dr.Stanley Coren school of dog training, it is as much learning " how to speak dog" through body language etc. as it is actual dog training.
He has a tv show as well
It really works and uses positive reinforcement.
Norm