Hello, everyone. Sorry, this is a long post.
Bean, my 4-month-old Hairless Chinese Crested, is the most wonderful, interestingly unique dog I have ever owned. She is quite beautiful and very very smart. But the little dickens communicates most commonly by biting. She gets vicious and downright weird about it. Last night, she lunged at my face, snapping at my nose -- for no reason. She has also taken to nipping at me when I am cleaning her pen if she is in it. The more I tell her No, the harder she bites. She is not being abused and is totally loved. At this time, she about 50/50 on being calm and loving vs. psycho pup. I do assert myself as the "alpha", the boss, and I have owned other animals for many years with no problems.
The breeders tell me the litter was "rescued" from another breeder that was very ill, and the pups didn't get enough socialization from the mother dog, who was sent to another home. I don't know what age. The litter stayed together until 12 weeks, which is good, but I am wondering how much actual interaction with humans the pups had, or how they were treated before being rescued. On the other hand, the breeders I bought her from are excellent people and very loving towards the pups, and had other animals around to teach socialization.
Bean has other behavioral problems, like struggling and scratching all excited to greet other humans. She loves people. But she gets so wild about everything, it seems.
For anyone not familiar with this breed, the Hairless Chinese Crested has got a major mutation, which results in different degrees of hairlessness and also a primitive mouth -- very sharp, pointed teeth, and sometimes missing teeth. In one litter, you can get the Powderpuff, Hairy Hairless, the Hairless and the True Hairless, depending on if they get the Hairless Gene. The more Hairless they are, they have more "primitive" physical characteristics. (I'm wondering about the behavior too.)
Here is a big clue: I found out the original breeder bred two Hairless Cresteds to get this litter, very bad, which results in dead pups in the womb, and stillborns, and lots of genetic defects. So -- I'm wondering how my sweet little Jekyl and Hyde pup that gives me hugs and obviously loves me, can be broken from this wild behavior, without making her mean.
I'm hoping that she is just going through a puppy stage, and I am trying not to reinforce her behavior. My best result was today. I started this thing that when she is chewing on my fingers, (which always escalates into biting) -- I come at her with slap on the rump real fast, and she stops and looks around to see what was that? I was trying so hard not to laugh. And she stopped. Then she was getting mean again afterwards, so I took her to her pen. I just don't want her to grow up mean and unpredictable. I have scars from the biting.
Any ideas?
LaVerne
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