I have a 3 month old male Labrador name Ben. I will be asking a lot of advice from all of you. Lol. Ben is still biting us with those sharp baby teeth. We have tried everything,, if anyone can give me advice on this please do so. I would really appreciate it. THANKYOU
Welcome Tina and Ben from Hattie 8 years and Charlie our rescue boy 5 years. Hope you enjoy the forum!! x
Welcome to the forum! Lots of people here will fully sympathise with you as fellow puppy biting victims! There is heaps of info here on biting and what to do about it: http://www.thelabradorsite.com/labrador-puppies-biting/
Welcome from Holly and me in Monmouth, Wales. The bitey phase does pass. Meanwhile the link that Rachael posted is good advice.
Just wanted to say hello and welcome! It will indeed pass. Lots of long sleeves and long trousers and follow the advice, it will absolutely get better. jac
Hi from me and Maisie! The bitey phase will end soon (I promise!). Keep your arms and legs covered at all times
Welcome to the Forum....I missed most of the biting as our dog only came to us at 5 months but you have my sympathies as I've read so many desperate stories of Labrador puppies turning all 'crocopup' .The great news is I also read when everyone comes out the other side,you will too,hang in there for a bit longer x
Hi from me and Bailey in Adelaide, Australia. Bailey is 15 weeks old tomorrow and we are still in the bitey stage! I don't have any tips to prevent it but you have my sympathy! We will come through this phase and emerge with calm,well trained dogs
Hi to all,, well, I got Ben to go up the stairs but it's afraid to come down. Is that what they do. He 14 weeks now. I'm right behind him so he don't fall. Well, if anything, I'm halfway there. Getting to heavy to bring up and down stairs. Does anyone have stairs and what does your dogs do? Please let me know. THANKYOU all.
Hi there and welcome. When we first got out pooch he was 8 months old and looking back on it I think now that he had never been up or down stairs. He was quite fearful of the whole experience! But I found that putting kibble down on the stairs and letting him take his own pace was the ticket for us. He was soon zooming up and down with no issues after the first initial refusal.