Posts Tagged puppy potty training

Puppy Potty Training Tips

Posted by admin on Tuesday, 21 April, 2009

Keys to Training Your Puppy Quickly Master the Art of Puppy Housebreaking Housebreaking Without Rubbing His Nose In It
by Help Your Pets

Puppyhood is the “formative” period for your dog. What you teach him during this time will most likely stick with him the rest of his life. One of the most important things you will be teaching him is where to potty.

Probably the most helpful tip to ease both your pup’s stress and your own is to develop a routine early on in your pup’s life. You can start by accustoming your puppy to a sleep/eat/potty routine. Try feeding your puppy around the same time every day, allowing for frequent trips outside to potty. He will soon adjust his body to the routine.

A good way to save your sanity is to admit right off the bat that your puppy will have accidents. You can help ease these by keeping some newspaper in a dedicated spot so that your pup can at least familiarize himself with going in one area if he can’t make it outside. This works particularly well if you don’t have a doggy door and your puppy relies on you to let him out.

The sooner you get to know your puppy’s “eat/potty” routine, the easier potty-training will become. A good rule to go by is to estimate that your pup will be ready for a trip outside around 15 – 20 minutes after he has been fed/watered. If you can, try to have your puppy outside at this time so he will familiarize himself with the proper “potty surroundings.”

Be sure that you separate “potty time” from “play time.” Puppies love to explore. It’s natural and should be encouraged, but only when it’s the appropriate time. Nothing is more frustrating than to be up at 2 am with your little guy running around the yard for twenty minutes, only to potty as soon as you get back inside.

This period in your puppy’s life is a great one to start administering praise and discipline techniques. Many people prefer “good boy/girl” and “no,” which can be still be used when your dog is older. Although puppies need a lot of repetition, routine, and firmness, remember that your puppy will soon grow up, so enjoy his puppyhood while you can!

Potty Train Your Puppy – The Start Of A Lifelong Relationship

Posted by admin on Tuesday, 21 April, 2009

When you get a new dog it brings with it excitement and fun for your family but there is one major worry for dog owners and that is the issue of potty training. Getting a new puppy means you must also accept you have to manage some tasks such as this. You can expect to have rugs ruined, furnishings damaged and your bed might seem a lot less welcoming until you have got this done. There is also the foul smell that has a tendency to linger all over your home. No pet owners want this so the best way to avoid such an annoying situation is by potty training your new puppy properly.

Dogs are quick and intelligent so it is obvious they won’t want to be dirty and they want to learn potty training quickly. Your new puppy doesn’t have a lot of time between the feeling of the need to go and his body waste being excreted so keep a close eye on him at all times. If your puppy begins going in circles and sniffing the ground it is a good sign that he needs to go to the potty area quickly. It is fairly simple to potty train a puppy once you can recognize the signs he displays when he needs to go.

It can become a chore to open the door each time your dog displays signs of needing to pee so having a doggy door can make life a lot easier. When your pet learns how to use a doggy door he can make use of it all by himself to go outside the house when nature calls.

An excellent method to help potty train your dog is to have a regular routine of going for walks both morning and in the evening. When you get to somewhere that is appropriate for your dog to pee or poop linger a little while to give him the chance to relax and if he does then you should praise him.

When he passes water at the right places give him some praise and tell him what a good dog he is. Encouraging words will help reinforce the ideas about where he should or should not go to the bathroom. Mistakes will happen when your puppy leaves it too late to try to get to the right place so show you are disappointed but do not be tempted to punish him in any way. Your dog may be nervous about what is the right thing to do so you should reinforce the good things he does and show disappointment when he does wrong and slowly you will potty train him.

A careful owner must always be on the lookout for your puppy needing to go outside when you are training him. You may find your patience tested but a dog can only learn at his own speed of learning. Make sure that you show love and affection towards your pet while he is undergoing the training.

It can be rather tedious constantly watching your dog for when it needs to visit the designated potty training area. Eventually he will get it right every time and you will know all the effort put into potty training was worthwhile. Your house will remain clean and you will avoid the stinking odour of an untrained puppy.

Puppy Training: Ways to Train My Puppy

Posted by admin on Saturday, 18 April, 2009

About 90% of American pet puppies live indoors with their owners. Dogs kept inside with your family and you need to be housebroken. Potty training a puppy is one of the situations many owners find themselves overwhelmed by. It is not that difficult, it doesn’t have to be messy and housebreaking can be accomplished without a struggle. Training needs to receive a significant amount of time devoted to it in order for it to be successful. You will need time, a little more involvement, as well as some training tools such as puppy training pads.

The New Doggie is the Boss

For dogs and puppy owners, there are two major rules that you should stick to with puppy training. Remember to never punish your puppy for something you didn’t see him do. And second, praise your puppy for the things he did do right. Don’t let training lead to situations where your only action is saying ‘no’ when you catch your pet doing something wrong. Praise them or offer them a reward when they do the right thing.

House Training/Breaking Puppies

There are different ways to housebreak puppies. When starting indoors, encourage your pup to use puppy training pads or papers to go to the bathroom on. These pads are treated with chemicals that make puppies want to use them to do their business. The moment you observe them beginning the pre-elimination routine of pacing and sniffing at the floor, lift up the puppy and quietly relocate them to the paper or puppy training pads, and then offer them a reward for appropriately going to the bathroom.

After things are progressing well and the puppy is using the puppy training pads or newspapers regularly, you can then locate them a little closer to the door and eventually outside. The change is made from concentrating on bathroom habits at a location inside the house to a location outside the house. In the very near future you will have no need for papers or training pads indoors.

The only major problem or setback with this puppy potty training method is that it takes a longer period of time to encourage the puppy to do his bathroom rituals indoors. When house training puppies, other widely used techniques might work; you could, for example, use puppy crate training or cages, always accompanied by the owner’s close supervision.

The maximum amount of time that dogs can hold their bladders and bowels is between seven and eight hours, so you should keep that in mind when using a crate or a cage, trying to housebreak your dog. This method usually works as most dogs treat cages and crates as their sleeping places and they do no want to soil their beds because they will be forced to lie in the mess. It is not a good idea to crate a puppy for long periods of time.

This is not to say, though, that continual supervision involves crates or cages, and paper or puppy pads. It is here that dog owners opt to spend whatever time is necessary with their pups. This works good for those who are retired, work from home, or any owner that can spend lots of time with the puppy. With this method, pet owners usually hustle their puppy outside as soon as they notice the pre-potty signs. A constant watch must be kept on puppies to make sure that there are no accidents or slip-ups.

To sum up, puppy housebreaking and training should be treated as part of the ‘come’ and ‘stay’ command trainings. However, toilet training and housebreaking your puppy will be the messiest types of training, and generally have more headaches than other sorts of dog training. Don’t give up!

Productive Puppy House Training

Posted by admin on Monday, 13 April, 2009

With a new puppy in the home, puppy house training guidelines must be worked out to prevent little “surprises” from appearing around your house. Every owner must go through house training with their new puppy. All puppies are different, some pick up things rather fast and some don’t. It can take a while to see a difference once you start your puppy training, so don’t get frustrated. If you manage to stay patient and calming your puppy will soon be well on its way to being housebroken.

Looking Into the Mind of Your Puppy

Looking into how your puppy thinks will certainly assist you in producing good puppy house training results. You must realize that the meaning of being clean doesn’t necessarily mean the same thing to you and to your puppy. You think it is important for your puppy to go to a chosen spot in the garden and “go”, but to your pup, what’s important is to relieve himself where the notion takes him. Your puppy’s only concern is to go away from his food and bed which is also the health and safety rule of nature. From their perspective, anywhere away from their food and bed is the perfect place. You must teach your dog that places that may be acceptable to him are not necessarily acceptable to you, you must lead him to the spot that you have chosen for him.

Anticipation of the Signs

During the first couple of weeks of a puppy, the early warning signals aren’t always easy to read, so you need to find a way to understand this as soon as possible. Choose a location soon that is close to the puppy’s food, bed, or play area. It is very rewarding to be able to anticipate when your puppy needs to go outside. Puppies need to relieve themselves frequently particularly after they eat, drink, play or get excited.

As you get to know your puppy, you will get to learn the various signs that he needs to go out to the bathroom. When a puppy is persistently sniffing, circling a single spot or has his tail held high, those are common signals. All you should do if this happens is get your dog and go to the area that you have designated as their toilet area.  You will be on your way to successfully completing puppy house training in doing so.

Even dogs that have gone through dog training classes will occasionally have small accidents when they are very excited or when greeting friends and family members. This is a natural response called submissive urinations and should not be treated apart from the normal house training. Although there may be additional accidents, your dog must not be chastised. Punishing a house training pup will only lead to confusion and more make the puppy feel the need to hide when it relieves itself.

Do not yell at your dog, instead work things out until this habit is broken this when accidents like this happen during periods of high excitement. It is best to try to greet new people while you are both still outside and the setting is low key. Build up your dog’s confidence and greet them gently. If your puppy has an accident, it’s best to just clean it up without making a big deal of it. Your dog will soon stop having accidents, and you can congratulate yourself on successfully concluding another round of puppy house training.

Puppy Barking is a Puppy’s Way of Communicating

Posted by admin on Wednesday, 25 March, 2009

Canines bark, so a puppy barking is a completely normal phenomenon. As natural as birds sing, puppies bark, whine, and sometimes howl. If you have a dog that you love, you know that you are going to hear plenty of barking, whining, and howling at almost any time. Don’t even think to train your puppy not to bark as it will never work. However, it is really ideal for you, your neighbors, as well as your dog, if barking fits can be placed under control.

Why Dogs Start Barking

Socially isolated or confined dogs who have not had supervised exercise for long periods will need some kind of outlet for their pent up energy. If there is no one around to tell a dog to stop, he will tend to start barking as a hobby. That is why it is not a good idea to leave your dog alone all day. Pretty soon, barking will become an enjoyable habit for him or her. Many dogs, once they start barking, do it because they think it’s fun and enjoyable.  

Unintentionally, you may have trained your dog to bark excessively. You obey your dog when he speaks. When the dog barks, you let him out.  When he barks again, you let him back in. If he barks, he gets his tummy rubbed; therefore, barking is a behavior that is rewarded. A puppy gets attention from you by barking.  For this reason, it is easy for barking to become a habit.  After all, the puppy wants your attention, and if he barks, he gets your attention. And sometimes, it is very easy to forget to provide positive reinforcement such as praises and treats for your dog when they are not barking.

Puppy Barking and Exercises

If you want to reduce the amount your puppy barks and give yourself, your household, and your neighbors a little peace, it is important that you understand why your puppy barks.  Usually a puppy will bark because it is afraid, bored, lonely, or frustrated. Things will greatly improve when you spend time with your puppy. While you are away, a puppy will generally spend most of the day sleeping as long as it is content and well-exercised. Be sure to give your dog some of your time.  He needs your attention and the benefit of training, exercise, and play.

Puppy obedience training is just as boring mentally for dogs as it is for their owners. “Come here”, “sit”, “heel”, and “stay” all make enjoyable games for your dog.  Why not make it even more fun by rewarding good performance with treats, hugs and praise.  Remember that dogs and puppies like a quick pace and high energy! Try to think of new training ideas for your puppy so it won’t get bored.

If a dog stays in a fenced yard almost all of the time, he is likely to need some socializing. Puppy barking will lessen if you walk them around your neighborhood. On a daily walk they get to explore the outside things they see and smell while they are at home. Running around the yard like a crazy dog is a normal thing for a dog or puppy to do, but it does not count as puppy exercise. Just like humans, they pace, fidget, and have other nervous tendencies. Some fun things to entertain your puppies with are chew toys for puppy biting and digging pits.

Dogs are very sociable. They are just like us.  They need companions and friends. Take your dog to a dog park daily or weekly and let them mingle with the other dogs. If they engage in dog training, playing, and romping all day, they will be exhausted. Then they will have no trouble sleeping well and rejuvenating after a good day of play and exercise.