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When the mouth-watering smell of a backyard BBQ fills the air, it’s only natural for our four-legged pals to want to join in on the grilling fun.
Updated on October 29th, 2025
Ditch the boring mealtime routine and try building a balanced bowl for your pet.
“If you love me … you must love my dog.” – Abigail Adams
Learn how to cook some delicious and nutritious goodies for your dog to enjoy anytime.
Tired of your dog begging at the dinner table? Learn effective tips to curb begging behavior, from training techniques to creating positive mealtime routines. Enjoy peaceful meals and support your dog's health by reducing begging habits.
This can take a long time and patience to fix. Start with having Chloe on the leash and go into the kitchen and give her treats. Ask her to sit, walk in and out of the room and give lots of praise and treats. Then have her sit with you in the kitchen while you are petting her until she relaxes. After doing this for several days hopefully she will be able to walk into the kitchen, eat treats and be relaxed. Then bring her into the kitchen and have her sit with you when someone else starts cooking. Keep feeding her treats and pet her. She only needs to stay there for a few minutes to start then gradually increase the time. You want her to associate getting tasty treats with being in the kitchen, and with you praising and petting her for staying there. As she gets more relaxed you can try shutting the bedroom door also so she can't get in there to hide. She should improve but this may take some time. I'm glad you are helping Chloe get over her fear. Thanks for using Boop by Pet
Updated on August 12th, 2025
It sounds like he is experiencing some separation anxiety when left in the kitchen. You could try an Adaptil collar and Solliquin chews and see if that helps. Also, you could give him a Kong stuffed with treats or a puzzle toy to keep him busy for a few minutes after putting him in the kitchen. https://www.adaptil.com/us#redirected http://www.solliquin.com/
I recommend that you or your Mom feed him his dinner when she goes into the kitchen to cook. Then he will wait for her to cook and be happy because he knows he will get fed at that time. You can also give him a chew toy or play fetch or tug with him to take his focus off her. Another trick is to fill a Kong toy with peanut butter or cheese whiz so they take a long time licking it out and it will keep him busy instead of barking. Thanks for using Boop by Petco to help you care for Damon.
He is still very young so it may take some more time to be fully potty trained. The best thing would be to never let him out of your sight when inside so he does't have the opportunity to go in the kitchen alone. If you can't watch him then he should be in a crate while inside the house. When he goes outside, give him a treat with a lot of praise. With time, he will master potty training.
Mealtimes are a common trigger for aggression between dogs in the same household - this may be a resource guarding issue related to the food itself, or could be redirected aggression that is happening when Harvey gets excited and/or frustrated while waiting for his food. The simplest solution would be to put both dogs in separate rooms with the door closed (or in their crates, if they are crate-trained) prior to getting their dinner ready. Feed them in their separate areas (again, in different rooms with the door closed if possible - separate parts of the same room isn't enough), then let them out once they have both finished eating. Pick up the bowls and put them away afterwards to avoid any resource guarding issues with the empty bowls. If this doesn't help, or if you are interested in a more detailed training plan to work on this behavior over time, I would recommend making an appointment with a veterinary behaviorist. He/she can evaluate both dogs in person to hep determi