People truly have thought of everything! I'll get those sensitivity videos playing for him right away for things I can't show him in person! I hope you had/are continuing to have a restful holiday if you are celebrating at this time, and if not, I hope you are having a restful regular time!
Radio is good with the vacuum thank gosh, he got used to it pretty quickly and has positive associations thanks to treats and cuddles when it comes out. His current struggle is he gets barky the second he's left alone in a room for a moment. (Like if one of us were to go to the bathroom quickly) We don't make a fuss out of going, and we wait until he's stopped barking for a second before we come back into the room so he doesn't think barking gets him things but it makes him anxious none the less. We've been signalling "Be right back!" to him, and if he stays quiet until we get back (never more then a minute or two) he gets praise and a little treat, but it's slow going. He only acts this way if we are in the apartment somewhere. When we leave, we don't hear a peep. Our friend who comes to feed him lunch if we are both at work notes he's never barking when she shows up, and our neighbours tell us the same- he doesn't bark if we are not home.
I think we all akin Mountain Lodge it to chris evans ripping logs in half slow motion at this point. The yankee candle girls certainly know what I want the second I walk into the store. (As for unique scents in fics with werewolves?? Well that's just logical isn't it? Canine snooters work much differently then ours! Much better all said and done. I believe whatever werewolves want to tell me about their experiences, I'm certainly not in a position to disbelieve.)
The idea of someone training their chipom to help them with diabetes makes my heart almost burst with how sweet it is. My mum had late-onset diabetes and she would have really benefitted from a good doggo friend like that letting her know when her sugar was too low. What a smart little guy.
no subject
Date: 2018-12-26 11:49 pm (UTC)Radio is good with the vacuum thank gosh, he got used to it pretty quickly and has positive associations thanks to treats and cuddles when it comes out. His current struggle is he gets barky the second he's left alone in a room for a moment. (Like if one of us were to go to the bathroom quickly) We don't make a fuss out of going, and we wait until he's stopped barking for a second before we come back into the room so he doesn't think barking gets him things but it makes him anxious none the less. We've been signalling "Be right back!" to him, and if he stays quiet until we get back (never more then a minute or two) he gets praise and a little treat, but it's slow going. He only acts this way if we are in the apartment somewhere. When we leave, we don't hear a peep. Our friend who comes to feed him lunch if we are both at work notes he's never barking when she shows up, and our neighbours tell us the same- he doesn't bark if we are not home.
I think we all akin Mountain Lodge it to chris evans ripping logs in half slow motion at this point. The yankee candle girls certainly know what I want the second I walk into the store. (As for unique scents in fics with werewolves?? Well that's just logical isn't it? Canine snooters work much differently then ours! Much better all said and done. I believe whatever werewolves want to tell me about their experiences, I'm certainly not in a position to disbelieve.)
The idea of someone training their chipom to help them with diabetes makes my heart almost burst with how sweet it is. My mum had late-onset diabetes and she would have really benefitted from a good doggo friend like that letting her know when her sugar was too low. What a smart little guy.