Early
Socialization
Race Foster, DVM
Marty Smith, DVM
Drs. Foster & Smith, Inc.
Let us assume you are looking at a puppy
that is between four and seven weeks of
age. At this point, his behavior is a product
of genetics and how the breeder has managed
his activities and environment. The latter
cannot be stressed enough. It forms the
process known as 'socialization,' the development
of interactive skills with members of its
own and other species and learning to be
comfortable in different situations and
environments. The personality and behavior
of a mature dog will be strongly affected
by how it interacts with littermates, mother,
people, and various external stimuli that
it encounters during the first 12 weeks
of life. The breeder will control a portion
of this period and you the rest.
Relating to mother
From
the mother, it receives the first stimulation
to breathe, nurse, urinate, and defecate.
She also trims the umbilical cord, cleans
it several times a day, keeps the puppy
warm, and ensures a safe and secure environment.
She also provides disciplines when its behavior
exceeds limits that only she understands.
She supplies everything needed.
Relating
to littermates
From
his littermates, the puppy acquires additional
knowledge on how to interact with members
of his own species. Through their play,
puppies learn about dominance and submission,
get an introduction into mating behavior,
and receive a wide range of stimulation
for the development of their senses and
physical abilities. Puppies that have no
littermates or come from litters that were
split up at too early of an age, typically
have difficulty interacting with dogs later
in life. Not knowing how to react when confronted
by a member of their own species, they tend
to be either overly shy or aggressive. Often,
they fail miserably in multi-dog households.
Relating
to people
At
the Breeder: Through handling and play with
humans during their first seven weeks of
age (which all good breeders encourage,)
the puppy learns to trust and interact with
people. Without this involvement in their
lives they tend to have difficulty forming
relationships with or being comfortable
around people. Dogs isolated from humans
at an early age tend to become one-person
dogs. They usually do not blend well into
homes that contain multiple children or
several adults. Obviously, these traits
can be occasionally overcome, but it is
not always easy.
In
most situations, breeders provide what the
puppies need for correct socialization with
little effort expended. They keep the puppies
until they are seven weeks of age before
allowing them to go to their new homes.
The mother is left with the puppies throughout
most of this period. After four or five
weeks, she will be allowed to spend time
away from the pups, but she will still be
with them for several visits each day. Good
breeders love children if for no other reason
than to have them around to play with their
developing puppies.
In
our own experiences of raising litters,
we have our children start holding and petting
the puppies when they are only a few days
old. At three to four weeks of age, we let
them play together in outdoor situations
for an hour or more on a daily basis. And
lastly, most breeders try to expose their
pups to many different stimulating environments
or situations. They should not be confined
to a whelping box or pen until they depart
for their new home. They need to learn to
respond to many different situations to
develop confidence in themselves. Their
curiosity needs to be stimulated. If you
ever decide to breed your own litter, all
these same things will become your responsibility.
Relating
to You and Others: We talked about how the
breeder must provide the puppy with an environment
that prepares it for life among humans,
occasional encounters with other animals,
and to be comfortable in a wide range of
situations and environments. It is referred
to as socialization. When the puppy is now
in her final home, this process must continue
as she is still developing behavioral patterns.
In fact, these first few weeks in your home
are some of the most important in the socialization
process.
We
recommend keeping the puppy’s schedule
full for the first few days in your home
in an effort to limit any loss it might
feel from being separated from its littermates
and mother. However, between seven and ten
weeks of age there is an additional problem.
At this time, most puppies go through a
period in which they lose some of their
self-confidence. Trust comes harder for
them and things that we would expect them
to be comfortable with suddenly elicit anxiety
or fear. Where before they would boldly
charge into a new situation, they now seem
apprehensive. This could be anything from
loud noises, new people, play that is a
little too rough, going to a new place,
etc.
Behaviorists
have found that this has little to do with
the change in where they are living or the
separation from their siblings or mother.
Even in cases in which the litter remains
together, this same behavioral pattern is
noted at this age. Do not overreact. Your
puppy will mature through this and be just
fine if you do your part. You do not want
to become overly protective and isolate
it from the outside world. We think it is
better that during this two to three week
period, you increase the range of its experiences
by small steps, not giant leaps and bounds.
Choose activities that can be controlled.
Introduce the puppy to new people including
children, but do not let thirty kids come
screaming at her from all directions. Let
her meet the neighbor’s dog, just
not the rowdy one down the street. At approximate
12 weeks of age, this period comes to an
end and most owners will see their puppies
become bolder toward new people, animals,
and experiences.
Continued
socialization through the first year of
life
From
this point through at least one year of
age, it is imperative that you make every
effort to expand the puppy’s environment
and expose her to new things. During this
stage of their lives, puppies should be
around as many different people and animals
as possible. Take them with you when you
go for a walk, shopping, or even to work.
Encourage your children to bring their friends
over to meet their new pet. Take an obedience
or training course where they will meet
other dogs. All of this is important.
Dogs
that are isolated during their first year
of life develop many problems. A few will
become aggressive, but the majority are
more likely to become overly shy or timid.
They lack confidence in the presence of
new people or situations. They cower in
the presence of strangers. They jerk at
their leash to get away from children or
other pets. Forced to be in a new place,
they may sit shaking behind you, drooling,
and panting rapidly. In the worst case scenario,
they may become fear biters. This is a behavioral
pattern in which dogs, when encountering
new people or pets they are afraid of, do
not know how to react and simply attempt
to bite the stranger. Once this develops,
it can be very difficult to overcome.
The
bottom line is: involve the puppy as much
as you can in your daily activities. She
will be well-socialized and happy. Besides,
that is the reason you got her, right?
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