
I am new to the forum (though have read it for some time!) I have a wire haired fox terrier bitch, Bracken, who was 2 years old Monday. She is my first dog, and we never had pets when I was a child - as I am in my forties, it has been something of an uphill struggle. I must admit to thinking that I had made a huge mistake in the first few months, and there were times when I would have handed her back to her breeder, if it hadn't seemed an admission of defeat!! Actually, reading all the posts on this forum, and the answers when people were having puppy problems, was probably the only thing that kept me sane. Hard work? Yes! Definitely, but that terrier character is so appealing that it is all worth it.
Anyway, in my (very brief) experience, fox terriers are very full on indeed. In fact we were told, as we drove away with her "they're little b***ers you know!" by the breeder, and that phrase has been used when addressing her on numerous occasions! She is also known as "bonkers dog". Realising I needed help I took her to obedience classes from 10 weeks of age. We are very lucky to have a fantastic club in Otterbourne near Winchester, and they have been lifesavers. We go most weeks, are amazingly in the advanced class and it has been great. Bracken has her Bronze good citizen award, but we haven't tried for silver yet, having missed the last test due to other committments. It took a while to get anything resembling attention from her, but we do manage it now, and even have heelwork of lead (at a bit of a distance, as she does not do the close up work I have seen in the collies and labradors at our club). She likes to back off a bit, so she can see my face without craning her neck back too much!
Walks are always taken on lead, as her hunting instinct is very strong indeed and we are surrounded by rabbits, sheep and thoroughbred horses. And I live in fear of her rushing off to play with a foal (she loves horses) and getting kicked. Luckily we have a very large garden and she can run and go mad in this (she is very fond of her frisbee). I admit to this being my fault as I am still terrified of losing her if she spots a rabbit. She is very single-minded, and totally deaf, once she goes into hunting mode.
House training was a nightmare - I thought she would never be clean. She was crated at night (still sleeps in it now, but the door is not shut), and invariably wee'd, poo'd, and then lay on it, even though the crate had paper at one end. Again my fault - I should have been getting up to let her out at night, and not paper training, but you know all that are you are already experienced in dogs. During the daytime we had numerous accidents in the house - I could never spot the signs she wanted to go, and this went on for so long I despaired. Every friend I spoke to said that their dog had been house-trained in days, or in one case, even before 8 weeks of age. I think it would have been 8 months (!!) before I would say she was house trained. I was obviously not consistent enough, and it was clear that she didn't have control for some time. We have taught the words and she understands a wee request (busy-busy) and a poo request (quick-quick) though obviously can't always oblige.
Do beardies bark? I ask because Bracken took until about six months old to find her bark, and can now bark for England. Luckily she only does it when playing with us, or when someone comes to the house, or when over-excited at obedience classes(!), as her bark is surprisingly loud for her size. I found her very stand-offish as a pup. I expected her to want cuddles and she didn't. Not interested at all. Always more interested in doing her own thing. That has changed as she has got older, and she is very affectionate.She follows us around all day. Rolls over to ask for tummy rubs, and likes to snooze on our laps in the evenings.
Tips - well, as I said, mine will do anything for food, so all training has been food based! She is very, very bright, but does things on her own terms. She has a "what's in it for me" attitude for training. Ignoring or walking away has been found to be the best way of calming her down, though it took until about a year old for this to work. She was a terror as a pup, and I was often found telling my family that she must hate me! Also, she is a terrier and does not easily take "no" for an answer. She is impossible to tell off, by which I mean that she simply doesn't get it! Telling off is another game for her. As far as I can see life, all of it, is one huge game for a fox terrier.
Getting Bracken was the best thing I have ever done. When circumstances are right I will have another fox terrier (and another...) I love her spirit, boldness and playfulness. The phrase I would use to describe her is "a free spirit". To have this little free spirit doing off lead heelwork at my side, bouncing along, smiling up at me is the most wonderful thing in the world....
Claire