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Chewing and Destructive Behavior: Why Dogs Destroy Things and How to Stop It
Episode 21

Chewing and Destructive Behavior: Why Dogs Destroy Things and How to Stop It

Pawprint Academy: Your Blueprint to Raising Better Dogs · TOP Dog Training LLC

February 23, 202655m 10s

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Show Notes

Destructive chewing is not random, and it is not your dog being spiteful. Dogs chew because of biology, stress, boredom, teething, lack of structure, or because they have learned that chewing furniture works. In this episode of Paw Print Academy, we break down the real reasons behind destructive chewing and counter surfing, and why punishment after the fact fails every time. If you are searching for answers about dog behavior problems, obedience training, or how to stop your dog from destroying the house, this episode gives you a practical, science-based path forward.

We explain why yelling, rubbing a dog’s nose in damage, or correcting minutes later does nothing to change behavior. Dogs learn through timing, clarity, and consequence, not emotion. The real solution is leadership, management, and structured training. That means crate training done correctly, structured exercise, clear boundaries around food and furniture, and proactive obedience training that teaches impulse control before temptation shows up. Prevention is not weakness; it is smart dog training.

If you want to stop destructive chewing, you need to meet your dog’s physical and mental needs while tightening up your household rules. We walk through how to create daily structure, how to use place and crate commands to prevent chaos, and how to build reliability so your dog can be trusted unsupervised. This is about becoming a calm, consistent pack leader who sets standards and follows through. When you combine structure, accountability, and clear communication, destructive behavior fades and a stable, obedient dog takes its place.