• Teeth Snapping..what does it mean?

    From jugrgrymrod@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Quail Fat on Sat Jan 25 20:17:01 2020
    On Monday, July 26, 1999 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, Quail Fat wrote:
    I have an 18 month old female pitbull terrier that exhibits a strange behavior. This dog is smart and is a fast learner. While my wife and I
    were playing with our dog, we noticed she bites the air making her teeth
    make a snapping sound. We initiated the same teeth snapping behavior at another time to see what she would do. Our dog responded (no barking
    sounds) with the same teeth snapping behavior. The dog also "grooms" us for fleas whenever she wants us to play with her. My question is this: In the world-o-the canine, What does the snapping of teeth mean???
    my dog does this , she snaps and i snap back at her and she nuzzles her face into my chest . i believe it's an attention thing ,but i could be wrong .

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  • From cshenk@21:1/5 to jugrgrymrod@gmail.com on Sun Jan 26 06:38:12 2020
    jugrgrymrod@gmail.com wrote:

    On Monday, July 26, 1999 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, Quail Fat wrote:
    I have an 18 month old female pitbull terrier that exhibits a
    strange behavior. This dog is smart and is a fast learner. While
    my wife and I were playing with our dog, we noticed she bites the
    air making her teeth make a snapping sound. We initiated the same
    teeth snapping behavior at another time to see what she would do.
    Our dog responded (no barking sounds) with the same teeth snapping behavior. The dog also "grooms" us for fleas whenever she wants us
    to play with her. My question is this: In the world-o-the canine,
    What does the snapping of teeth mean???
    my dog does this , she snaps and i snap back at her and she nuzzles
    her face into my chest . i believe it's an attention thing ,but i
    could be wrong .

    Good question and as you might guess, there are several possible
    answers.

    Now, it's a post from 1999 so the person asking is doubtless long gone
    but generally it's a warning and should be curbed. at 18 months, it
    shouldn't be happening. At *young puppy* (up to 7 months or so) it may
    be mock 'learning to fight' behavior and fairly normal.

    Here's 2 relatively decent articles: http://www.vetstreet.com/our-pet-experts/why-does-my-dog-snap-at-the-air

    https://dogcare.dailypuppy.com/dogs-snap-2422.html

    It is often normal in dogs with a strong 'herding instinct'. Common
    herding breeds include the Border Collie, Australian Shepherd,
    Australian Kelpie, New Zealand Huntaway, and Australian Cattle Dog.
    Other breeds with herding instinct include Corgis and Shetland
    Sheepdogs. These types tend to not make good family dogs overall
    though with proper training, can be great (especially the Border
    Collies who are less difficult to train).

    Like with anything, individual dogs will vary by temperment just like
    we do so this isn't meant to say that these dogs are 'bad', just that
    you should be aware on adoption of general traits most apt to be strong
    in a breed and prepare training to match what they need. Mother dogs
    teach their puppies to not do this once they are big enough to hurt
    another but allow it as normal learning when very young.

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