I too have an 11 week old puppy who is now just about house trained. This is my method.
Most importantly, get a crate. your dog will not mess in there as he wont sleep near mess. Take him out in the garden every 20 mins or so WITHOUT FAIL!! when he does mes in the house, ignore it DO NOT TELL HIM OFF unless you actually catch him in the act, even then, just shout no and take him straight out. The signs you look for when he may be about to mess is sniffing the floor and going round in circles. I also foound that keeping him in the kitchen and not letting him anywhere else inthe house helps. My dog has the very occasional pee on the kitchen floor, but he has never poo'd in there.
House training takes work, unfortunatley the dog wont do it on his own, you have to put all the hard work in but its worth it. If you try my way, I reckon within 1 -2 weeks you will have it sorted apart from the occasional accident. GET A CRATE. They are great, its not cruel. We leave our crate door open for our pup, only shutting it on a night. he goes in there of his own accord to sleep during the day and he loves it.
Good luck, please let me know how you get on.
2006-09-18 02:19:00
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answer #1
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answered by Dingle-Dongle 4
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All puppies learn best and quickest through positive reinforcement rather than correction for making a mistake. I've used this method for countless dogs and it works well and quickly but is some work for you.
Keep the puppy in the room with you so you can keep an eye on him. Take him out after a nap, hard playing, a long drink or if he looks restless and hasn't been out for a while. Remember, this puppy is still young and, like a baby, has no bladder control. You need to go outside with him, tell him "go pee" and the very second he pees, give him lots and lots of praise, then come right back in the house. This is to he learns the difference between play time outside and potty time.
When he makes a mess, quietly clean it up unless you catch him in the act, then tell him no firmly and take him outside. If he finishes outside, praise him.
When you're not home or at night, it's best to put him in a crate until he's older and completely housetrained and finished the teething process.
If you train him this way with lots of praise rather than correction you're also building a relationship of trust with your puppy which will carry over into all future training you do with him. Good luck!
2006-09-18 02:50:32
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If a puppy piddles in your home it is YOUR fault for ignoring the signals. Take him (not put him) outside whener he wakes up. WStay with him and praise him when he does it. Ignore anything in the house. He will have shown signs that he wanted to go and when he could no longer hold it, he will do it and then forget he did it . Punishing and shouting afterwards will only scare him . Put it this way.
Your puppy isn't born understanding humans. He doesn't understand English.
If you were taken to Russia, and a big Russian person came and started yelling at you and slapped you, you would be afraid, not understand what you have done wrong, and get confused. This is how your puppy feels. So just watch his body language, learn when he wants to go, and take him out, stay with him, and praise him when he performs. Take him outside every half an hour and do the same.
I have 6 dogs, and occasinally foster for a rescue and have never had a dog yet who wasn't housetrained within a week.
2006-09-20 00:49:44
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answer #3
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answered by fenlandfowl 5
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Crate training in my opinion is the best way. Forget paper training. Establish a regular feeding time, followed by a walk on a leash until the pup goes. Reward, reward, reward mostly with verbal praise and petting when the dog does the deed outside. Then back to the crate. Puppies come out of the crate to go for walks, to eat and to socialize when you can watch every move they make. As they learn and mature, the crate time can be varied. Paper training is a waste of time! Do not put food in the crate. I put toys to keep them busy and water. They will not poop in the crate. Make sure the crate is the proper size. If you establish a very regular routine, and have patience, it won't take long at all.
2016-03-27 07:29:32
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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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/aMQ5Z
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.
2016-05-17 00:14:33
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answer #5
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answered by Lynn 4
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You should look in to getting a crate!
Have you cleaned the spots in the house with something like Nature's Miracle? If not, he can still smell it even if you can't see it. Also, make sure you have a routine down for her potty times!! A 11 week old should be able to hold himself for only about an hour or 2 at most.
With the crate you'd crate him when you know he'll have to go outside in about 15-20 mins. Then take him outside and wait till he goes- if after about 10 mins he still hasn't gone take him back inside- back to the crate (no eliminating outside = no fun in the house yet). Try again after another 10 mins. If he doesn't go outside, keep putting him back in the crate for 10 mins- if he DOES go outside, give tons of praise!! If he goes in the house, take her outside ASAP- do not yell at her b/c dogs do not respond well to yelling/hitting/harsh punishment. And you do not want the puppy seeing peeing/pooping as something to be yelled at for- he will start to hide where he goes making it more difficult to clean up after him.
At night, he should sleep in the crate for a few hours at most. If he whines before this time limit- don't let him out- ignore her. He needs to know that crying will not get him out of the crate.
Another thing is, does he have a way to tell you that he needs to go out? I bell trained both of my dogs. They ring a bell that hangs from the door handle to let me know they want out. When my beagle puppy was about 3.5 months old she learned to ring the bell in 2 days! She was potty trained in a little less than 3 weeks. She's 9 months old now and is completely reliable not to go in the house.
2006-09-18 03:48:48
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answer #6
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answered by niubutterfly 4
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puppy needs taken out first thing and last at night ,after feeding and shortly after waking .doing these and when he goes saying toilet and then good boy and treat show him he is being good he soon realises when he hears go toilet he has to go.
at night time best thing is a cage it can be his bed and also can be put in during day if you are doing anything and puppy is getting under your feet .pups will not go to the toilet in their bed yes you might get a few accidents but just wash bedding and he's not peeing all over the room.
I have a 9 month pup who i used cage for and he has not peed of pooed in this house since i got it at about 12 weeks last week i got a 8 week lab and as older dog does not need cage the lab is in it Ive had one accident in it but other than that he's been fine first thing in morning he's taken out and put outside straight away and he rushes to go.
The cage is handy for moving in car or even staying at Friends he can be safe in his cage.
2006-09-18 02:22:07
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answer #7
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answered by Nutty Girl 7
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Why arent you letting it out more! Your puppy needs to go out to wee way more than i think you realise! If it is weeing in a specific place get an old towel and pop it there when the dog goes to wee try to stop it by making a loud noise dont shout and frighten the poor bugger if it stops take it outside with the towel pop it on the floor if the puppy goes for a wee lots and lots of praise!!! God poor thing gets taken from its mum brought to a strange place then bullied by you!!!! Ps Dont ignore the accident just take the pup straight outside everytime!! it will soon learn they really are clever little things
2006-09-21 01:42:29
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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never punish your puppy! you will make it fearful and nervous..you may not have any probs at the mo, but it will develop them if you carry n. The bast method is to lavish praise on tyhe pup whenit goes to the toilet where you want it to. If it goes in the house, just ignore it..clean up the mess with a biological cleaner...this prehistoric thinking absoloutely disgusts me, you should be ashamed of punishing your dog after the incident. If you catch him in the act a firm 'no' is all that is needed and the pup put where you want it to go. All it sees is you being aggressive for no reason..it will become nervous of you and is likely to turn on you... Get a book on how to teach your puppy properly. If you resort to punishment all the time..you shouldn't even have a dog....
2006-09-18 04:26:22
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answer #9
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answered by wolfstorm 4
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2016-06-02 04:20:04
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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