
Thanks for those replies, Teri and Marianne - and what a fascinating tale about the lady with the mice!
Its true that her time at home in the house, when she isn't snuggled up with us, is largely spent pestering us for a game or a walk. She is on our heels all the time, waiting to be taken somewhere. I put a beanbag bed in the window (we have a sort of window seat) so she could look out and amuse herself when we were busy, but now that is over-stimulating for her and she barks like a loon when she sees another dog.
She has a medium kong and I've stuffed it with all sorts from pate, to hot dog sausage, to chicken paste - but once she's extracted the bit she can reach, she loses interest and wanders off. She doesn't seem to be the least bit motivated to get every last bit, like most dogs would. I froze it once but she wouldn't touch it. She has plenty of chews and toys, but she only plays with them when we are home - if we do leave her alone (which happens a couple of times a week, mostly weekends, and we have left her for up to 5 hrs), she sleeps in her spot in the window, waiting for us patiently, and doesn't touch any food or toys or chews while we are gone.
When it comes to training, she does get reasonably interested - I play "find the toy" with her, but because she has to wait to find it, she tends to lose patience and dash after me as I'm placing the toy, or simply loses interest. I have to keep finding new ways of varying the game, otherwise she walks or away or starts making up her own rules. :) We've done a bit of clicker and I have at last taught her to lie down (even the trainer at puppy class failed to get her into a down!), but she won't give me a "rollover", and she hasn't grasped the concept of raising a paw - I've tried free-shaping it, but she still tries sitting and lying down to get me to click, looking at me blankly without twitching a paw.
I need some new ideas and some variations! I've signed up for a free online clicker training course I saw in another post, but she doesn't seem very interested (maybe she doesn't see the point!) in following the target stick, so we're a bit stuck at lesson three.....
*sigh* She is exhausting, we thought that we would have a beautifully calm dog due to all the exercise and wonderful freedom we could give her. That was the only reason we considered a terrier (she comes from working stock too). None of the books tell you that activity begets hyperactivity!!
I feel a bit bemused about where to go with our training sessions, as she is rather sceptical about everything and doesn't grasp the NILF concept - if she can't play a game whenever she wants, for nothing, then she'd rather go and look out the window and ignore you than ponce about for treats and listen to that annoying click, thank you very much.
Is there a MENSA test for dogs? I'm not sure if she'd score very very high, or very very LOW.......:)