Dogs and memory

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durbster

Original Poster:

10,293 posts

223 months

Thursday 12th December 2013
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The dog managed to get hold of a huge slice of unattended cake a few days ago. We heard a thud, then ran through to find the dog frantically trying to swallow a piece of cake slightly larger than her own head. When she realised she'd been rumbled, she froze and the cake slowly slid back out of her mouth onto the floor.

She's a very sensitive thing and generally knows when she's in trouble (which is very rare to be fair), so she was sent to another room to think about what she'd done and stayed there for the rest of the evening. There was one attempt to sneak back in after half an hour or so, but a stern look and she got the message and disappeared again. smile

Anyway, my question is, how long do you drag out a punishment? I have absolutely no idea how a dog's memory works so she was kept out of the room for the rest of the evening but I'm never quite sure at what point she'll have forgotten why she's being punished. Do you think they're they smart enough to realise that they're still in trouble for something they did several hours ago?

durbster

Original Poster:

10,293 posts

223 months

Friday 13th December 2013
quotequote all
Okey dokey, ta. Unecessarily harsh then.

I forgot to add this was her second offence - she'd reached up and snatched a piece of cake earlier in the day (and of course threw it up later) but that one was left on the edge of the table. She just got a firm "no" that time. This second time the cake had been moved in but she'd pulled the tablecloth so the cake fell to the floor (possibly by accident).

She's generally extremely well behaved so it's very rare she gets told off. The fact she doesn't snatch food is why we didn't move it out of her reach. She can sit with her nose almost touching your steak but she will not try to take it.

That said, I take responsibility for her being a bit sensitive. Having never had dogs before I'd just assumed people still raised dogs the old fashioned way i.e. making sure they know their place (I don't mean smacking, just not putting up with any nonsense). We did overwhelmingly use rewards training but I know I was still too strict for the first few weeks.

Also, with her being a Staffy I was absolutely determined she should be an ambassador for her breed and give nobody opportunity to add fuel to the fire.

Basically I thought dogs were much simpler than they are. I thought they were almost robotic. I absolutely wasn't prepared for the depth of feeling and emotion that comes with them (both ways).