Saturday, April 6, 2013
Saturday, April 6, 2013
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Food Rules for Fido

How dinnertime for your dog affects behavior

Lay down the law when it comes to dinnertime.
Lay down the law when it comes to dinnertime.
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  • Domino, Nancy’s five-year-old sweet-tempered spaniel mix, seemed elated by the arrival of Eddie, a new Boxer puppy, into the home. But that evening, when the playful ten-week-old made the mistake of sticking his nose into Domino’s dinner bowl, the easygoing spaniel turned into a snapping turtle. Poor little Eddie learned the hard way just how sacred a dog’s dinner bowl is, even to the nicest of dogs.

    Chow Power

    Dogs revere food. They think about it, anticipate it, revel in it, search for it. Even their anatomy, designed for catching and killing prey, cries out, “show me the food!” When they have those cute little running dreams, they are in truth chasing something they want to eat.

    Unlike we humans, who usually reach a point of satiation, most dogs will eat until they reach the bursting point, and then eat a bit more. It’s an instinct passed down from wolves, who, if lucky enough to kill a deer or moose, would gorge themselves, knowing that the next meal might be days off. And so most dogs, if given the chance, will eat whenever food comes their way.

    That’s mine!

    The dog’s obsession with all things food can sometimes cause behavioural problems, even among the sweetest of pooches. For instance, feeding an insatiable young dog beside an older, slower-eating pet can often provoke an aggressive altercation, when the pushy youngster turns to the elder’s dish for “seconds.” Or, if the older dog doesn’t object, the youngster will scarf the senior’s food down too, resulting in eventual obesity for one, and malnutrition and emotional strain for the other. As amazing as it may seem, many owners with one chubby dog and one emaciated pooch never notice what’s really going on.

    Some food-crazy dogs will become protective over their bowl to the point that they’ll literally bite the hand that feeds them, if it comes too close during the meal. Many owners won’t even be aware of this until they are occasioned to reach into the dog’s bowl or move it during the meal. When a snarl or nip ensues, the shocked guardian either does nothing or else overreacts physically or emotionally, compounding the problem.

    The Cost of Free-Feeding

    Though most dogs will do anything for a meal, if food is made available to them all the time, their food drive will actually dwindle, often to the point where it becomes difficult to use food as a motivator for training. Additionally, this practice of “free-feeding” often results in a finicky eater, whose guardians, in an attempt to stimulate the dog’s appetite, will begin offering all manner of tidbits and human foods as incentives. This results in pushy, begging behaviour, a placating relationship, and a spoiled dog. An ironic side effect of free-feeding is that the dog, instead of enthusiastically eating her meals at prescribed times, instead picks at the food in her bowl all day, which the guardian keeps refilling and refilling. The free-fed dog often ends up eating twice what it needs to, resulting in obesity.

    Timing and Frequency

    When a dog eats can be as important as what it eats. If you feed your dog too late in the evening, you might increase the odds of her having a housetraining accident in the middle of the night. Or, if you feed your dog at random times, you won’t be allowing her digestive tract to develop its own “rhythm,” again resulting in an unpredictable elimination schedule. Feed your dog too early in the morning, and you could encourage her to become a foodcrazed maniac later that evening.

    How often you feed can affect behaviour too. Take a dog with a high food drive and feed her only once a day and you could create a stressed-out pet that’s constantly searching for handouts or one that tries to break into the cupboards or garbage. Feed a picky eater two or three times per day and you could lower her food drive even more, compounding the dog’s culinary disinterest. Keep an adult dog on a puppy’s feeding schedule (three times per day), and you’ll most likely invite obesity and unpredictable elimination habits. 

    Where’s Dinner?

    The location of your dog’s bowl can affect her day-to-day behaviour, for the good or bad. For instance, feeding your dog in the kitchen teaches her to consider that room as an acceptable place to loiter. As it’s the place where you keep and prepare your own meals, this often results in pesky begging behaviour, garbage or cupboard raiding, or at the very least, creates a floor licker.

    As mentioned before, feeding two or more dogs in the same room can result in aggression, obesity, malnutrition, and a level of stress that has no place in such an important part of a dog’s day. Instead of being a dog’s favourite event, it can become a competitive, worrisome contest. The ensuing tension will often be redirected into misbehaviours such as destruction, barking, fighting, marking or even a breakdown of housetraining.

    The Joy of Food

    Feeding time shouldn’t be troublesome, tense, confrontational, or cause for misbehaviour. Instead, it should be a happy, exciting event for the dog, and an affirmation of your love and authority. Here are some basic rules that, if followed, should minimize foodrelated behavioural issues, and bring the joy back into dinnertime.

    Read the rest at Modern Dog Magazine >>

    Steve Duno Modern Dog Magazine
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