
It took me ages to teach Buster how to behave around visitors, the no.1 thing that made it hard for us was peoples reactions to him. He is a big boy, so visitiros would panick (makes it very good fun!) or use a stern voice with him
(Bust likes to try to 'calm' sterness with playfullness = makes it worse!)
.
Getting visitors to follow the rules is pretty hard - ignore dog, do not even look at him untill he's calm. But with a lead on the dog you can take controll of the
dog, regardless of the visitors behaviour.
I would keep Buster on a lead, get him to lay at my feet and give him treats for staying laying down - to start with he wasn't calm, but laying down was the starting point.
Then it was fine-tund to treats for laying calmish. Then laying calm. When he could lay calmly without any coaching/luring/reminding, he could just sit (still on a lead).
When the sit was very good he was allowed off-lead but kept under strict verbal control.
Then he was allowed to greet visitors, but any sign of excitement he'd get a reminder, if that failed he'd be shut behind a baby-gate for a few minutes.
I still now use a baby gate for visitors that Buster doesn't see as often, but for the people he sees most and has learnt how to behave around, (mum, dad, sister and a friends teenager), he stays loose. The 'drill' for these people goes like ths "Buster, kitchen", he'll run to the kitchen for a "behave around visitors=biccy time" treat, this allows them some space to come in down our narrow hallway
(without Buster trying to run circles aorund them and wedge his nose up thier bums!)
. He will then try his best to work treats form the visitors, but this is usually laying at thier feet and nodding his head or gently poking them with his nose.
It took almost 2 years for Buster to be off-lead around my dad as he'd get his 'gruff' voice out and try to controll Buster with that. He'd panick if Buster put his headout to snigg his leg. I finally got my dad to listent to me when Idid an impression of his behaviour (flapping arms around and shouting), this imediately made Buster get excited with
me, so dad could why I keept asking him to be CALM !!
Sorry this is a lot of waffle, but there is hope. You can't give up. If you haven't got the energy or time to train the dog when you have a visitor, pop her behaind a baby gate or in another room so she doesn't egt the chance to practice acting like a looney.
Buster was terrible, he would bite & mouth people out of excitement and when they were sat down he'd launch himself at thier faces!!!! All out of excitment but still definately not the behaviour a dog should be doing. I managed it, you can to, but you MUST stick to it and you HAVE to stay calm.
Good luck :(