Quote:
Originally Posted by jacqui
Hi Skeeter,
I have tried a number of things over the years, and I have to say that the only thing which has cured Holly, is carrying on with my daily duties during thunderstorms etc, yes in the beginning she wasnt much improved, but little by little it worked. You have to let them know that you are not afraid and that it is an everyday thing which should not bother them. Sing a little, laugh a lot and play with your dog to try to get him to ignore the situation. I know it is difficult in the middle of the night, but I get up with Holly, put on the radio, make a cuppa, read the paper and have as many lights on as I can to blot out the lightning. Eventually she calms down enough to sit or lie down, now if I am not bothered about it, neither is she. It does work, but it does take time. My vet advised me (obviously you would need to speak to your vet before doing this, as skeeter may already be on some meditaction) If you know a thunder storm is coming, give her a pet travelling tablet, it will help calm her without making her drowsy, before the storm comes. This did help in the beginning, when we were trying to get her to ignore them. Also, I found putting her on her leash and keeping her by my side gave her more comfort than letting her run about. Also, give plenty of water, but no food.
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This is all excellent advice, just to add, don't make a fuss of him when he is worried and upset. When you give a dog attention for being upset, you reinforce the worried behaviour - causing it to escalate. Your dog thinks that you are approving of his worry, in which case he now has a reason to worry (because you must be worried too!).
To avoid rewarding him for this behaviour, get out of bed, and try and get him to do some obedience (a good distraction such as music/lights etc such as what Jacqui suggested may help). Basic obedience that he knows, such as sit, down, shake a paw etc, are all excellent tools in getting your dog focused without rewarding him directly for the unwanted behaviour. Of course, you can reward him for performing the 'tricks' with treats!
As soon as he bites, always reprimand, with a low "no", a short guttural growl, or a short low "aaah!". Bad behaviour, especially biting, should always be reprimanded - do not excuse the behaviour and try to console him. As tempting as it is to console a small dog like a baby, you only end up making the problem worse.
Medications
can help you get through the hump of early behaviour modification to phobias, but I highly recommend trying some of the suggestions here without medications to see if his behaviour can be improved with some behaviour modification training first.