> Can anyone help me with my 7 month old german pointer
The general advised amount of forced excersise on here is usually 5 mins per month of life, so at only 7 months old that = 35 mins.
Brain work is more tiring than physical stuff.
Your dog is at the teenage stage, life is all about action, speed, add into a mix a dog that has not yet developed much self controll (due to age) and you have an animal that can be very excitable and impulsive. I think her age is at the root of the problem.
When my dog hit 7 months of age he started to get more exciteable and harder to controll,
(jumping up when he had never done that before, knocking me over, pinning me to the floor and chewing my head etc!!)
he got worse over the coming months!
I can see why you leave her tied in the garden, it's safer than leaving her loose to escape & get run over, but it would be much safer to come up with another way to contain her. A dog-proof room indoors or a run she can not climb up out of.
Have a good read of theemix's advice, get her used to you coming through the door, you can take the approach one would with seperation anxiety, to start with, only be behind the closed door for a nano-second and as you get her calm, increase the time you are out of the door (work within her limits, do not stay behind the door long enough for her to get excited). And remember, you need to teach her waht you DO want her to do - sit, lay down, run to a specific room to settle before getting a fuss. Whatever you want her to behave like needs to be taught to her, so she has an alternative to the bouncing about.
I was in tears with my dogs behaviour when he was 7 months old, I thought I'd never be able to teach him anything. I soon realised that a HUGE part of it is down to how we
feel. Be confidant, but above all CALM and PATIENT, it honestly really, really helps. It's near on impossible to teach a dog to be calm and relaxed if we are wound up/paniking/angry/frightened or defensive/in fear of injury from the excited dog.
You CAN do this, and you WILL do this, it is just going to take time, comitment, patience and consistency.
Things you can do to help;
Sort out her containment for when she is left - something safer with less space for her to get wound up in.
Introduce training, lots of short training sessions all the time. Keep them short, teenagers have a short attention span and are easily bored, they crave action, if she is into toys, use toy-games for training. You can turn any fun-game into a lesson on anything you want, I've foudn that games are a great way to build up self-controll when excited, so it's a perfect way for you to teach her how to sit (for example) when she's wound-up and excited about fetching/tugging the toy you have on offer.
Make sure you interact with her often, but under CALM cicumstances. If she only ever sees you as a fun thing, you will find it much harder to get her out of this.
Be consitent.I wont give you a hard time re. the shock collar, I am completely against any aversive methods, but we are all only human and I know I have done things I wish I never did but we live & learn.
Dogs (and any living being) learn so much better through rewards - reward the behaviour you want and the behaviour will increase, so set up as many ways as you can to get her to do the beahviour you want - reward it - and it will soon become the automatic reaction :)
Rewards include food, toys, games, petting - anything the dog likes - the more the dog likes the thing, the more rewarding it is. Some things the dog will find more rewarding than others, some things the dog will find more/less rewarding in different situations. The more often you train with her, the more you can find out what makes her tick.
Please don't leave the forum, there are many people that want to help.
Even though my dog is now 5 years old, I really do remember how bad things felt for a wile when he was a teenager, I really thought I'd have to re-home him - and I had been training him all the time since the moment I brought him home. The teenage stage can be VERY testing!!!