Terry Albert

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Terry Albert



Average rating: 4.28 · 950 ratings · 54 reviews · 10 distinct worksSimilar authors
Your Labrador Retriever Pup...

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4.29 avg rating — 373 ratings — published 2012 — 11 editions
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Your Golden Retriever Puppy...

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4.29 avg rating — 331 ratings — published 2016 — 5 editions
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Your German Shepherd Puppy ...

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4.21 avg rating — 307 ratings — published 2012 — 9 editions
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Your Beagle Puppy Month by ...

4.09 avg rating — 22 ratings3 editions
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Your Bulldog Puppy Month by...

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4.31 avg rating — 16 ratings3 editions
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Boxer (Animal Planet® Dogs ...

4.50 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2012 — 3 editions
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Labrador Retriever (Animal ...

4.29 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 2011 — 4 editions
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Collie (Dogs 101)

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 3 ratings
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Basset Hound: Your Happy He...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2008 — 6 editions
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The economic burden of HIV/...

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Your Beagle Puppy Month by ... Your Golden Retriever Puppy... Your Bulldog Puppy Month by...
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Quotes by Terry Albert  (?)
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“Preventing Separation Anxiety We wish our dogs could be with us all day, every day, but it’s not possible, and puppies do need to learn to spend time alone. A dog who can never be left home alone without destroying the house may be suffering from separation anxiety. Teach your Lab to feel safe and comfortable at home alone while she’s still a puppy, even if you’re home all day. Your life or job situation may change someday, and you’re heading off future trauma by teaching this lesson now, when she is young. Your puppy’s not yet mature enough to have the run of an entire house or yard, so confine her in her crate or pen when you’re gone. What you might think is separation anxiety might really be simple puppy mischief. When you’re not there to supervise, she’s free to indulge her curiosity and entertain herself in doggie ways. She knows she can’t dump the trash and eat the kitty litter in front of you, but when you’re gone, she makes her own rules. Teach your puppy not to rely on your constant attention every minute you’re at home. Set up her crate, pen, or wherever she can stay when you’re gone, and practice leaving her in it for short rests during the day. She’ll learn to feel safe there, chewing on her toy and listening to household noises. She’ll also realize that being in her pen doesn’t always mean she’s going to be left for long periods. Deafening quiet could unnerve your puppy, so when you leave, turn on the radio or television so the house still has signs of activities she’d hear when you’re home. Background noise also blocks out scary sounds from outdoors, so she won’t react to unknown terrors. HAPPY PUPPY Exercise your puppy before you leave her alone at home. Take her for a walk, practice obedience, or play a game. Then give her a chance to settle down and relax so she won’t still be excited when you put her in her pen. She’ll quickly learn that the rustle of keys followed by you picking up your briefcase or purse, getting your jacket out of the closet, or picking up your books all mean one awful thing: you’re going, and she’s staying. While you’re teaching her to spend time alone, occasionally go through your leaving routine without actually leaving. Pick everything up, fiddle with it so she can see you’re doing so, put it all back down, and go back to what you were doing. Don’t make a fuss over your puppy when you come and go. Put her in her pen and do something else for a few minutes before you leave. Then just leave. Big good-byes and lots of farewell petting just rev her up and upset her. When you come home, ignore her while you put down your things and get settled. Then greet her calmly and take her outside for a break.”
Terry Albert, Your Labrador Retriever Puppy Month by Month: Everything You Need to Know at Each Stage to Ensure Your Cute and Playful Puppy Grows into a Happy, Healthy Companion

“To carry your Lab puppy, with her facing sideways, scoop under her front legs from the side with one arm and over her rear with the other. Steady her hind end as you lift by holding up her legs while you grasp the front of her body slightly higher. Cradle her against your body so she feels secure and isn’t likely to wiggle free.”
Terry Albert, Your Labrador Retriever Puppy Month by Month: Everything You Need to Know at Each Stage to Ensure Your Cute and Playful Puppy Grows into a Happy, Healthy Companion



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