If your vet rules out health problems assume your doggy s obsessive floor licking is a behavioral matter.
Dog licks everything floors furniture.
Crumbs on the furniture and floor are obvious inducements.
Yes to lick things.
The origins of floor licking may be innocent enough your dog may have started it after meals when there were yummy crumbs on the floor but such purposeful licking isn t an obsessive or compulsive behavior.
Take your dog to the vet and explain when the licking first began and what area of the body or objects the dog is licking.
Difficult as it is to believe your dog may have a perfectly good reason for licking these surfaces.
When all said and done dogs were given tongues for a reason.
Unless you just dropped food there s no normal reason why a dog should regularly lick the carpet or furniture.
If you ve seen this behavior in your dog and wonder what the appeal is we ve laid out some reasons she may be a licker of certain things.
In fact some dogs see the world the same way as we see an ice cream.
Your first concern is to decide whether your four legged friend s couch carpet and bed licking qualifies as an obsessive or compulsive behavior.
They lick everything in sight.
If you see your dog licking the carpet or the couch this is where the behavior tends toward the stereotypical or behaviorally problematic according to dr.
Like it is made for licking.
Is your dog licking the furniture.
If your dog begins excessive licking in old age or at any time you should take your dog to the vet.