please take your dog for walks. they need that exercise and chance to see something different other than the backyard fence. i cannot believe some of the answers and excuses people have for not walking their dogs! so you live in an apt. building; it wont kill you to take the poor animal down two floors to do its business. remember, you wanted a pet and took on the responsibility. your pet depends on you for everything! they love us unconditionally. please continue those 4 walks/day--that is fantastic!! as for winter coming; if your dog has to go bad enough it'll go on the patio if it has to(but still walk the dog) good luck to you!!
2006-08-21 16:45:51
·
answer #1
·
answered by naomi b 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Keep going with the walks (great for both of you!) but try this: ask her to go on the patio, and try to wait her out to go to the bathroom. Use a cue like "Do your business" or "hurry up" or "go potty" (the one we use). Then don't set foot on the walk until after she goes to the bathroom. As soon as she potties, make your big fuss "Gooood girl!", give a treat, and tell her "let's go have a walk!". Make the walk into a reward for doing a fast potty.
That walk is the important final step! If your dog learns that the walk ends when she goes to the bathroom, she is plenty smart enough to figure out that she should hold it as long as possible. In snow and rainstorms, that just stinks. Teach your dog that she should go to the bathroom right away (on cue) on the patio, and then reward her by taking a little walk. This will pay off big-time when there's a big, nasty snowstorm or thunderstorm and you want to get her to do her business quickly so you can both get back into the house. Just don't take advantage of it too often, lest she figure you out again.
2006-08-21 17:01:39
·
answer #2
·
answered by FairlyErica 5
·
0⤊
1⤋
Take her to do her business as usual, pick it up and put it on the patio.
The next time she's ready to do her business, let her out on the patio.
WHY you want a dog to **** on your patio and not somewhere is is a question I might post - instead, just give me 10 points when this works.
2006-08-21 15:51:00
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
Hi, I understand that you are looking for some advice or resources to help fully train your dog or fix behavior problems. If a professional dog trainer is not an option at this time, or if you want to trt training your dog on your own (a great way to bond), I'd suggest you https://bitly.im/aNNTW
A friend recommened it to me a few years ago, and I was amazed how quickly it worked, which is why I recommend it to others. The dog training academy also has as an excellent home training course.
2016-05-20 10:43:47
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
I had the same issue with my dachshund. I live on the second floor and I just can't take her out every time she needs to go. I started out putting a patch of grass out on the patio, now she uses a grass mat on top of a piddle pad. When she needed to go I would just put her out there until she went then made a huge deal of it saying good girl, and giving her a treat. It worked pretty well.
2006-08-21 16:25:24
·
answer #5
·
answered by AH 2
·
0⤊
1⤋
Stop walking her. You probably need to start all over with your dog by carrying it back and forth to the patio like you used to train her.
2006-08-21 15:53:11
·
answer #6
·
answered by azngurl 2
·
0⤊
1⤋
properly, for the male concern, i'm suspecting that your dogs would have been abused or overlooked by ability of a male guy or woman. he's clearly terrified of adult males, so he desires to combat returned. i could propose bringing your husband into an identical room via fact the dogs, calming the dogs down, and having your husband supply him treats at the same time as on the time asserting "stable boy", if his habit is calm and submissive. do no longer try something unfavorable with the male concern, it is going to easily alleviate his concern of adult males. As for the foodstuff aggression, many of the time, this concern is tough to repair. Your dogs maximum possibly had to combat for foodstuff in his previous residing house, subsequently the interest/aggression for the foodstuff. I propose putting your dogs on a leash, some thing that he can no longer get out of. Have your husband or somebody else carry the dogs, at the same time as you place foodstuff on the floor. he will maximum possibly lunge for the foodstuff and start up snarling/barking/whining, yet, calm him down, make him take a seat, and as quickly as he's calm adequate, enable him consume some foodstuff. you may desire to make this consistent preparation, and if this preparation continues to be consistent (and once I say consistent I propose attempting this daily), your dogs could be greater advantageous in a be counted of weeks, months, it relies upon on the dogs fairly.
2016-11-05 08:42:43
·
answer #7
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
How selfish, you keep a dog prisoner in your home and even prisoners get an hour a day outside. You lazy Oprah-butted-snot, get your lumbering bulk out of that chair and walk the freakin' dog!
2006-08-21 15:51:53
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Just start walking her on the patio. She will get the message, especially when it gets nasty outside.
2006-08-21 16:50:12
·
answer #9
·
answered by Diane D 5
·
0⤊
1⤋
i think you take her out too much so now she thinks that its right to go outside on walks. just retrain her to go on the patio. give her treats after she goes and praise her.
2006-08-21 15:55:23
·
answer #10
·
answered by ? 3
·
0⤊
1⤋