In the dog world "redirect" is the term we use when a dog bites either a person or animal in response to a frustration or outside factor. I believe that same term applies to what I've been experiencing with Ona lately. Ona is almost always outside of her cage and loves to sit on my shoulder. Every morning she sits on my shoulder as I brush my teeth and she gets in the shower with me. Recently I've been having an issue where she will bite me HARD on the neck or shoulder when I do something specific that scares her or she doesn't like. Some examples:
I try to look for the pattern and remember the things she doesn't like and avoid those things when she is on my shoulder, but sometimes a new one comes up or she decides something that didn't bother her before now does. And how she reacts is to bite me VERY hard in the neck or shoulder. I'm not talking a little nip, it's the kind of bite that leaves an indentation in the skin and turns into a welt afterward. Pic of the damage from this morning:
It's gotten to the point that this happens about once a day. Normally it's in the morning while I am preparing her chop to give her for breakfast or while we are in the bathroom getting ready for the day.
This is how I normally respond when it happens:
Any thoughts or suggestions on this?
- Taking the cap off of a tube of chapstick
- Using the vacuum sealer on her chop container
- Wiping my electric toothbrush handle with a towel
- Sometimes throwing away trash
I try to look for the pattern and remember the things she doesn't like and avoid those things when she is on my shoulder, but sometimes a new one comes up or she decides something that didn't bother her before now does. And how she reacts is to bite me VERY hard in the neck or shoulder. I'm not talking a little nip, it's the kind of bite that leaves an indentation in the skin and turns into a welt afterward. Pic of the damage from this morning:
It's gotten to the point that this happens about once a day. Normally it's in the morning while I am preparing her chop to give her for breakfast or while we are in the bathroom getting ready for the day.
This is how I normally respond when it happens:
- I bend over so that she has to release the bite. She is then essentially hanging upside down from my shirt with her feet. I do normally say "Ouch!" I can't help it :/
- I try to get her off of me and she normally responds by biting my fingers just as hard - which doesn't hurt nearly as bad as on the neck and shoulder but it's still hard bites.
- I put her down somewhere, she normally is very worked up at this point and biting my fingers still.
- I try to ignore her and do the shunning method - but - she can fly. Most of the time she just flies right back to me immediately. That happened this morning and that's how I ended up with three bites there. She flew back to me and bit again.
- Eventually I'm usually able to put her down long enough to make eye contact with her and say "No. No. Gentle" in a firm voice. She gives me her "understanding" look that she does and then we move on with our routine. I really think she does understand when I tell her "no". The key is making that eye contact with her and making sure she is listening and focused before I tell her.
Any thoughts or suggestions on this?