| House
Training
Puppies have a strong natural instinct to avoid
soiling their own area. If you are consistent
and patient, this natural urge for cleanliness
makes house training fairly easy. You can begin
training any time after five weeks of age. A
little extra effort and patience in puppyhood
will make the difference later on between a
happy, cooperative pet and one that causes problems
for you.
Establish a teacher-learner
relationship
Use two types of rewards-praise and petting.
When your puppy asks for attention, you probably
respond by petting, which is only natural. Begin
using these requests to show that you are the
teacher and your puppy is the learner. It may
sound silly but it's important to establish
this relationship early in puppyhood.
Each time your puppy asks to be petted, respond
by holding your hand about a foot above his
nose and saying, "Rover (substitute your
dog's name), sit." Move your hand back
over his ears as you speak. This makes him look
up, which is the first part of sitting. Keep
repeating "good sit" until he sits.
Then pet him on the throat and chest with your
other hand for a few seconds as you repeat the
praise. If not successful at first, repeat the
procedure. When your dog sits from five to ten
seconds, release him from the command by saying
"OK", then pet and praise him again.
Gradually increase the sitting time until you
have reached one or two minutes before you say
"OK". Be sure everyone who lives with
the pet follows this procedure.
Consistent treatment from the whole family
makes for a better adjusted, happier pet. Insist
that your pet earn praise.
Teaching where to go
At first, feed at least three times a day.
All dogs do not have the same digestive rates-you
may need to feed your puppy as often as five
times a day in order to avoid overloading his
system and causing loose, difficult-to-control
bowel movements. When you find the right schedule,
the result is a dog that eats and then has a
bowel movement within a few minutes.
Feed indoors. Remember, dogs do not
like to eliminate where they eat. If your dog
is urinating or defecating in a certain area,
try feeding him right at that spot (after clean
up, of course.)
Right after your dog finishes eating, chase
him out good naturedly to his toilet area, ahead
of you if possible. Then let him sniff around
for a good spot. Do not confuse things by urging
him to go. After he goes to the bathroom, crouch
down and point at the urine or fecal matter
and say "good dog". Look right
at the stuff, not at the dog.
If your dog sniffs it, praise and pet him enthusiastically.
Take your puppy outside
After waking up, even from a nap
After extreme excitement
After drinking water
After prolonged chewing on a toy, etc.
If he starts sniffing around the house for a
good spot
In about four days your pup should automatically
head for his proper place after meals or whenever
the urge strikes. If it takes longer, be patient.
After this stage of house training, your puppy
knows where to go, but not when to go. Do not
try to teach self control (the "when"
part) until you can be sure he will always head
for the door when it's time to go.
Teaching when to go
To teach self control, you must keep feeding
times consistent. Don't feed at 7:30 a.m. on
week days and then sleep in on Sunday--you'll
ruin the whole program. Dogs can control their
urine for as long as thirteen hours when they
need to. To teach self control, you should try
to let your dog outdoors only at times when
you are ordinarily home to do so. Whenever you
see signs that your pup wants to go to the bathroom
during the forbidden hours, try to distract
him by tossing a ball, playing with a toy or
doing any activity that will take his mind off
the urge.
If possible, have your puppy sleep in a room
with people. Because he will be inclined to
tune into your sleeping times, there will be
fewer accidents and less night time disturbance.
Given a little blanket as a bed, most puppies
soon learn to sleep through the entire night.
How to deal with mistakes
Old fashioned house training methods tell us
to grab the puppy, show him the mess and punish
him. This is not necessary and probably harmful.
Instead, if you discover an accident, just say
"ugh" disgustedly and whisk puppy
out to his proper toilet area. Leave him there
while you clean up the mess. Make sure he cannot
see you cleaning up. Strangely, many dogs find
it rewarding to watch their owner picking up
stools or cleaning urine, and often leave another
such gift as soon as they can. Because puppies
seem to enjoy this game, it is a good idea to
have them watch you clean up after they go to
the bathroom in the correct place.
To discourage repeat visits, accidents must
be cleaned up well enough to completely eliminate
odor. After blotting and cleaning as best you
can with paper towels, soak the stained area
with an enzymatic cleaner. Let it remain on
the stain 30 minutes or longer, blot up the
liquid, and if still necessary, use regular
rug cleaner afterwards. To work properly, the
enzyme cleaner must be used before using regular
rug cleaner.
Puppy's Place in the
Family
The reason dogs are such good pets and fit
so well into human society is that they are
social animals by nature. Their greatest psychological
need is to be part of a group. Whether it's
a family of just you and puppy, or a boisterous
household full of children and pets, in order
to be happy your new puppy must feel secure
about her place in the group.
If you watch puppies at play, you will see
a lot of growling and tussling. There is more
to this play fighting than meets the eye. Those
little guys are already deciding who is going
to be "top dog". Whether you realize
it or not, something very much like this play
fighting is happening at home between your puppy
and the rest of the family.
To be confident and secure what puppies need
most is a master they can depend on. For your
dog to have a happy life and be a pleasure to
own, at least one person in the family must
become such a master. Dogs have no mental concept
of "friends and equals". Somebody
has to be boss. Assertive puppies will grow
up trying to be boss, which won't make either
one of you happy. A submissive puppy may spend
its entire life fretting and worrying, never
sure what is expected. Everything usually works
out just fine automatically--puppies find their
place in the family without much trouble and
everyone is happy with the arrangement. If,
on the other hand, you have a strongly assertive
or unusually submissive pet there are some things
you should keep in mind:
Working with an assertive
puppy
Assertive puppies tend to immediately investigate
new people and objects. They are quick to begin
play fighting activities with people. When they
want to be petted or fed, they are insistent
and demanding. These puppies fall easily into
the role of family protector because they think
the people belong to them. This is well and
good, but because dogs cannot really understand
human society, there is soon trouble. They may
try to defend you from everyone, and biting
the UPS man because he invades your yard is
not ok. Biting the children is not ok. The most
serious problems happen when grandchildren are
involved. Perceived either as an outside threat
or a competitor, it is not unusual for grandchildren
to be badly injured by big assertive dogs.
The training techniques used to establish
your teacher-learner relationship are especially
important. Remember that your dog will be much
happier in the long run if he earns praise and
pleasure by obeying you, not by demanding it.
It is especially important for you to be master.
Do not allow your dog to nip or bite at you
in a friendly way. Do not stimulate your puppy
by waving your arms and acting excited or by
playing tug of war. Do not become what your
puppy perceives to be an equal and competitive
playmate.
Working with a submissive
puppy
Submissive puppies tend to "shy away"
from new people or things, either by lying down
or actually running away. It is normal for most
puppies to be slightly submissive. They wish
for nothing more than to please you and this
makes them easy to train.Teach shy puppies things
they can do that will earn your calm, reassuring
praise. Try to provide a peaceful environment
and a dependable schedule that includes exercise,
a daily obedience session, and reliable feeding
times.
Submissive urination
Most puppies and young dogs have a tendency
to urinate in response to new situations, when
meeting a stranger, or even when their owners
come home and greet them excitedly. This is
a sign that your puppy is uncertain about what
is expected. Never scold when this happens.
Puppy is already trying hard to please. Calmly
reassure, ignoring the urination. Clean up later,
in private.
Fear biting
If puppies don't know what is expected of them,
particularly if they are beginning to believe
that people are supposed to do what dogs tell
them to do, they may react inappropriately to
strangers. The puppy is afraid, but psychologically
unable to be completely submissive. They
usually show signs of fear and try to run away
from a threatening situation, but when escape
is prevented, they bite. It happens when children
insist on petting a frightened dog, and happens
at the veterinarian's office. These puppies
need the firm leadership and reassurance best
achieved through obedience training.
Destructive Chewing
It is natural for puppies to chew--that's one
of the ways they explore and learn. Try to keep
valuable objects that are chewable safely out
of reach and provide a satisfactory alternative
like a Nylabone chew toy. Destructive chewing
is merely a way to work off excitement and relieve
frustration, not an insidious plan to get even
with you. Help encourage your puppy to be calm.
Be easygoing. Don't encourage tug of war or
play that involves chewing and biting.
When you leave home for the day, don't make
it into a big deal for the dog. By showing lots
of emotion of any sort (threats or cheerfulness,
it doesn't matter) you build up emotional stress.
This is often vented in destructive chewing.
Your last three or four minutes at home should
be spent calmly reading or sitting. Then get
up and leave, ignoring your puppy completely--don't
even say goodbye. Arrive home the same way.
Ignore your puppy at first and avoid the area
where things are most likely to have been chewed.
If things are a mess when you get home, don't
let puppy know you care. Behave calmly. Clean
up later when your puppy can't watch. Do not
build up more stress by scolding--that just
makes things worse. Again, work on teaching
simple obedience and building the teacher-learner
relationship. Puppies need a calm, dependable
master.
Chew Treats, Bones and
Toys
Don't give your puppy anything small enough
to swallow that can't be digested, or things
that can be chewed into large indigestible chunks
and swallowed.
Chicken bones, rib bones, and pork bones are
the most likely to cause trouble. Old gooey
rawhide chews or bones from the butcher that
have been around for a few days get rotten and
stinky and cause diarrhea. If you give things
like this (not really a good idea), use good
sense. Bones should be too large to swallow
and solid enough that they won't be broken up
into smaller chunks. Hooves, pig's ears, and
miscellaneous semi-digestible treats
probably aren't a good idea either, but if you
use them be sure they are too large to be swallowed
whole, or small enough to go all the way through.
Instead, we suggest using flavored Nylabone
or Nylafloss chew toys. If your puppy first
learns to prefer bones and rawhide, he probably
won't think chew toys are all that great, so
use them from the beginning. Nylafloss looks
like a big thick chunk of nylon rope. Puppies
like it because they can really sink their teeth
into the rope, and it helps keep the teeth clean.
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