We got our new dog, Cosmo (short for Cosmopolitan) on September 25 from a miniature poodle breeder at a farm near Brownstown. Cosmo was an early birthday present for Isaac. At first he was completely bashful, and would barely venture much past our feet to do anything. We even had to hold the bowls up for him to eat and drink. But after just a few days he became more confident and actually could be encouraged to go on short walks with us around the neighborhood, as long as he could still see our house. We even got him off to a good start with housebreaking, and as long as we go outside every 3 or so hours during the day, he does all his stuff outside. He was a good sleeper too -- the first couple of nights Isaac or I slept in the playroom with him, but after maybe four nights, he was able to sleep down there alone (the couch was lumpy for us). He never makes a peep during the night.
We had been trying to encourage him to go for longer walks with us, like maybe down the hill and perhaps going out of direct vision contact with our house. He would stop stock still at the end of our driveway and not budge. When we encouraged him out into the street, he would take three steps, look longingly back at our house, take another three steps, look longingly again back at our house, and this basically sums up the entire walk. After about a week, I mustered up an enormous amount of patience and somehow got him to go far enough that he couldn't see our house. At the point where I mentally decided to begin to turn back, he telepathically figured it out and began a powerhouse lunge in the correct direction home. When we arrived back in the driveway, he practically did somersaults head over tail he was so ecstatic. It was really embarrassing. Now at the beginning of every walk we always tell him that we will be allowed to return home at the end, just to get him to go, and he seems to understand.
He's a really good, usually calm and quiet dog. Right now we are working on basic puppy training, like reinforcing the housebreaking, helping him walk on the leash to the side while we walk just a step in front of him, and helping him realize that he is allowed to nip and chew on toys, but not on humans or clothes. I think he's lost a front bottom tooth, because he looks kind of snaggletoothed. All in all, I'm surprised by how much I like him.
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