Sounds like normal dogs playing to me!
When yogi feels like playing and kenya is asleep, he was grab her tail.
When they are going crazy zoomies, they play bite, run around, growl, but they are BOTH having lots of fun. its just about reading body language.
To dogs.. their mouths are kind of like our hands. biting doesn't always mean a fight
When you feel they are playing to rough, a loud noise usually puts a stop to it. clap your hands and say "ENOUGH!" and when they stop, praise them that way you have a way of teaching them when enough is enough without "scolding".
Kenya is very sensitive to "scolding" she was abused and will BREAK DOWN if I raise my voice at her in an angry way. I aways use a "NO" in a calm but stern voice WHILE SHE IS DOING SOMETHING WRONG and that is always enough. And there is never a need to scold her, she doesn't get what it means or why im doing it, especially after shes already done it.
If she chews something or does something else like that, its a "i shouldve been watching her" situation and NEVER a "she shouldve known better" situation.
Kenya has taught me to never take out my frustrations on a dog. its not her fault and shes way to sensitive to deal with that
When yogi feels like playing and kenya is asleep, he was grab her tail.
When they are going crazy zoomies, they play bite, run around, growl, but they are BOTH having lots of fun. its just about reading body language.
To dogs.. their mouths are kind of like our hands. biting doesn't always mean a fight
When you feel they are playing to rough, a loud noise usually puts a stop to it. clap your hands and say "ENOUGH!" and when they stop, praise them that way you have a way of teaching them when enough is enough without "scolding".
Kenya is very sensitive to "scolding" she was abused and will BREAK DOWN if I raise my voice at her in an angry way. I aways use a "NO" in a calm but stern voice WHILE SHE IS DOING SOMETHING WRONG and that is always enough. And there is never a need to scold her, she doesn't get what it means or why im doing it, especially after shes already done it.
If she chews something or does something else like that, its a "i shouldve been watching her" situation and NEVER a "she shouldve known better" situation.
Kenya has taught me to never take out my frustrations on a dog. its not her fault and shes way to sensitive to deal with that