Jumping on People

Hi everyone!
I am new to the group so I apologize if this has been discussed before. My sweet girl Roxy is 1-1/2 and I love her so much in fact my family humors me by letting me celebrate her birthday every year and I buy her presents for EVERY holiday. My biggest gripe about her though is that she jumps on everybody when they come over or if we take her out. She LOVES everybody. And she is VERY smart we did puppy training and could not cure her of this. And I mean she continually will jump on people and we keep yelling at her to get down and she will keep jumping and some people just hate it I know. Can someone please help me? I want people to love her as much as she loves people.

Thank you!!!!

Tracy

Comments

Dog jumping up

Yelling at her is probably the opposite of what you need to do. Yelling is attention. And can be seen as excitement by some dogs. "Oh, so you like me doing that, and you are barking at me in excitement." Try the opposite approach - turn your back and ignore her. Tell your visitors to do the same - turn away and stop interacting. When she is quiet, turn back around, praise and pat. Or better still, ask her to do something when she is quiet, like a sit, and then praise and pat.

jumping up

Aidan's picture

Hi Tracy, Bluefilly has made some great points and I don't have much to add. The trick is to teach them to sit instead of jump to greet. I like to make "folding my arms" the cue to sit, because it is a good response to a dog who jumps and it cues the behavior which will earn attention - sitting.

So teach sit, using folded arms as the cue. Write back if you don't know how to do this.

One thing that doesn't seem to work so well is to ask the dog to sit after she has already started jumping. I think you're best to turn your back and ignore the dog until she has settled down a little first. It's good if you can get that 'sit' before the jumping begins.

Teach it in a low distraction environment while she's not excited to see you, i.e after you've been home for a while.

Regards,
Aidan
http://www.positivepetzine.com

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