Toilet Training Your Puppy |
| Date Added: October 20, 2009 05:06:09 AM |
| Author: Admin |
| Category: Dogs: Training |
Toilet Training Your Puppy
It’s easier to train a puppy, or older dog for that matter, if you have access to a park or garden. People who live in an apartment or disabled people have a different problem, but the basics are the same. PUPPY NEEDSThe puppy basics are pre-programmed, the dog needs to relieve itself at regular times, such as:
THE SIGNSThe body language for all dog breeds is the same:
When you spot the dog doing these activities, interrupt it and take it outside. Avoid picking him up if you can, you want the dog to learn to walk to the back door when it wants relief.
CRATE TRAININGRemember that your new trainee is a clean animal and doesn’t want to soil its own space. Remember that one of the first things a newborn puppy learns is to be house-proud. The litter watches their mother cleaning up their waste. This is the reason crate training is so successful. Crates, available from any Pet Supplies store, may look like a jail to humans, but to a dog it’s a den. Dogs like their dens the same way they like going under tables, behind chairs, or under beds.
The crate allows you to concentrate on your own activities 24 hours a day. USING WORD CUESSelect a phase that you would be happy saying when standing next to your mother, and use it every time the dog relieves itself. In time, the dog learns to associate that phase with the elimination. Keep it simple “Time to go” or ”Pee Time” are simple enough, or you could simply whistle. Be consistent with the tone of the whistle though. BACKYARD TRAININGAt the signs mentioned above take the dog outdoors, and then be prepared to go with the dog and stand outside with it. If you stay inside the dog may be in such a hurry to get back inside he forgets what he went out to do and will perhaps relieve itself inside the house. That’s bad training. ACCIDENTSAccidents happen, and if you catch the dog relieving itself, yell or growl at him. Loud enough to get his attention and then run towards the back door. Your aim is to encourage the dog to willingly follow you outside, where, after the excitement has subsided, it should complete what it has started. Put him in another room while you clean up the mess. PUNISHMENTThis must be stressed: punishment doesn’t work; the dog will have no idea what it is being punished for if you dish it out more than 6 seconds after the crime. The dog does understand you are angry, and responds submissively, but its not guilt, the dog just wants to appease you and calm you down. PAPER TRAININGPaper training is good for people living in apartments, but you need to remember that this method prolongs the training. You are training your pup to mess on paper inside the house, the later when he has control of his bladder and bowels, you must retrain him not to mess on paper, but rather mess outdoors. THE CLEAN UPRemember that the dog's smell is far more acute than ours. The normal household cleansers may work for us, but they do not mask the odors for the dog. Avoid ammonia based cleansers as ammonia is a natural by-product of wastes and will attract rather than repel. Everything, the carpet, the underlay and even the floor should be treated with an odor-eliminating product.
Other Dog Training, Dog Health and Dog Breed Information articles are available at Woofahs - All Things Pets |
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