Rambunctious Remy!

Remy is only 5mths old isn't he?

He hasn't hit adolescence yet - more like 'tween', maybe a 10 year old. However he is at the age for the second fear stage, which happens around 5-6 months. Kismet hit a fear period about 5.5mths. She went from acting like super- dog and leaping off everything to being scared of the arm of the couch. Suddenly she's scared of men, birds, the dark and the dog next door. At 6mths +1wk she came out of it, and is back sitting on the arm of the couch and running up to all the men (I've been getting renovations done). I just had to wait it out and not force her into anything. They will hit more fear periods up until 18mths (usually the next one is about 9mths), although the age they experience them, and how they react, will change. My old girl developed a fear of drains in her adolescent fear period and she still won't walk on them 13yrs later.

In dealing with a fear period you need to be gentle and careful. If you train and he he is reaching his threshhold then don't push it. Step back and leave it to another time. Don't feed him treats when he is reactive - it does nothing to help and you could end up rewarding that heightened stress state. It's also worth remembering that dogs don't understand the concept of 'no' until they are at least 6mths. A negative noise generally just gets their attention, but they don't understand that it means stop the behaviour.

With the car, young dogs, just like human children, can get quite bad car sickness. And like human children it is something that many will grow out of when they finish growing. So that could be why he is reacting.

Remember he is still a baby, even if sometimes he thinks he can be a big boy (you know tween agers). Keep going with the exposure to new things, but while he goes through a fear stage, just a little at a time and always make it positive.

I love these stages. It's fascinating to watch their personality change and grow so quickly. With human children all these stages take years, with dogs it's just a matter of weeks. Mind you, ask me how I feel about adolescents in a few more weeks, Kismet is just starting.
 
Awwhh - he is still a little pup.

Shelby is a very determined and thick minded little girl, unlike our 1st Sheltie Hollie. Hollie lived to please, Shelby lives to have fun.

When Shelby would jump we would turn our backs to her and completely ignore her. Once she stopped jumping we would praise and play. She is 10 and will not jump up on people at all.

For the car - Shelby used to get car sick when she was a pup. As a result she does not like the process of getting in the car. She loves rides and often just goes to sleep - but the process of getting in she hates. I now show her that I have a treat in my hand, she will then follow me out to the car, I throw the treat in the car and then I can pick her up and put her in.
 
I think shelties are particularly good at back chaining...meaning they recognize how certain things relate to what comes next, next , next. Right now we are dealing with Mindy’s over arousal about our grill. (I know!). For some reason she’s decided to FREAK OUT when we go onto the deck to grill, so she now gets herself whipped up when she sees my husband getting things ready for dinner even when there is no grilling involved! It is frustrating, but I’m trying to figure out when her anxiety and over arousal starts so we can work on making those actions indicators of happiness, plus, working on treats for the porch, sliding glass door, grill, my husband being out there while she’s inside. This will keep us busy all summer!

Yesterday, I grilled some chicken on the back porch. Remy was incredibly bothered by this all of a sudden. Me going out the back door was incredibly upsetting to him. I've done that (grilled) probably 30 times since he's been with us and he's never had that reaction. Every day is a new day with our little boy...
 
Yesterday, I grilled some chicken on the back porch. Remy was incredibly bothered by this all of a sudden. Me going out the back door was incredibly upsetting to him. I've done that (grilled) probably 30 times since he's been with us and he's never had that reaction. Every day is a new day with our little boy...
Oh, Lordy! Maybe Remy and Mindy are related. I don’t know what it is about the porch and grilling. I do know part of it is the sound of the sliding glass door. That’s gotten her over excited for a long while. I usually use treats to distract her which only works modestly. The grilling thing I think has something to do with my husband being separated from us (even though she can see him). If she goes out there with him, she stays wound up, I think because of the grilling noise? Hard to know what all goes into it.
 
Yes, well, Remy goes "outside" in the back yard and I'm the primary picker upper. So I'm grabbing a bag and heading that way 3-5 times a day anyway. Remy is now having that reaction when I go out ANY door - front or back. Must be separation anxiety or something. However, it's 10x worse when mom is departing... :-)
 
Sounds like a bit of separation anxiety. My Finnie hates it when anyone goes out the door as well so I will put him in a down stay. Better nip that in the bud before now before it gets too late. You could try having him on leash and practicing with either yourself or your wife going in and out. Have him sit and be calm and reward. Let's him see too that nothing bad I see going to happen when you go out.
 
Brodie was doing that as well - which is why I started 'wait' training with him. He's getting really good at it but it takes time, patience and consistency. I agree, nip it in the bud now....
 
Strangely, Mindy's very inconsistent about this. Sometimes she reacts to one of us leaving, but other times no reaction at all.
 
Howdy Folks,

I don't know what to tell y'all except that Remy is a problem child, a rebellious teenager, a bad seed...

I tease. He's just overly spoiled and has a mind of his own. He's pretty much potty trained (except when everyone thinks someone else took him out already) and has learned commands like "sit" and "shake a paw." However, the little bugger won't come when called, ignores the "off" command for jumping up on people, and has complete and total freak outs when it comes to trying to WALK him or RIDE in the car - because of cars. You would have thought that he got hit by one in a previous life or something with his vicious reactions towards them.

We are trying to take Remy in the car daily for him to simply get used to it, but he's gone from crying to intensely loud barking that literally requires ear plugs. During freak outs, he completely ignores treat distractions but if he does take a moment for them he then chokes due to his immediate return to barking.

He probably needs professional help with these habits but we're not doing anything this summer and I don't know how they discipline dogs (we would never allow someone else to be harsh with him). So, I'm wondering if y'all have any suggestions on what to do with our rambunctious little boy.

Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you for your time.

Bill & Remy
The best thing I ever did with my car reactive boy (who ironically is fearful of them and won’t get too close even though he wants to herd and chase).
The best thing I did was get a head harness. He hated it and he behaved in it. It will gently turn his head if he pulls to chase/ react. Then he doesn’t amp up and react as much. Took all the fun out of the cars on walks. Then I could treat and praise. For awhile he behaved and didn’t try if he had his head harness (Gentle leader). If he didn’t wear it, he would react. He knew the difference. Now I don’t Need to use it at all and he rarely Barks at them except maybe a really busy road and I can just tell him “leave it”.

in the car, we crated and covered the crate with A blanket.
 
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