cage train them they dont usual pee where they sleep , put in cage but let animal out every 30 minutes
2006-11-05 10:02:18
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answer #1
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answered by ravendiane1 2
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1. Get a wire cage, now called its house.
2. Put the puppy in the house at night, and dogs usually don't like to make a mess in their house.
3. If the puppy yelps alot during the night....he's sick and has to go outside immediately.
4. When you open the door, take the puppy with a lead on the collar, outside immediately.
5. The pup will start to associate you opening the door with something good.
6. Let the dog run and jump and play outside...throw a ball, unless it's very early in the morning...and cold outside.
7. Give the dog praise when it goes.
8. do not let the pup run all over the house.
9. You must only allow the dog to be in 1 room at a time, and must be restricted.....this is only a baby and has no idea where the boundaries are.
10. You need to teach the dog its boundaries...and show lots of love and praise.
11. A very young dog cannot control his functions yet, so it must go outside every 3 hours, and set the oven timer if you need to remind yourself to take the dog out.
12. Do not ever hit the pup....it destroys them forever!...and they forgive but do not forget.
13. Give lots of praise, and learn that dogs get sick when they eat something they should not have...it's not their fault....babies do the same.
14. Remember to put the dog in the house, when you can't take care of the puppy and when the pup needs a nap.
15. Buy lots of puppy treats for praise...and reward the dog for good behavior.
Remember not to let the dog have the run of the house, and as it behaves in one room, add another, and as it gets older and house trained...you can add more rooms, however the dog should be with you ....believe it or not, the first two years it is still learning...about what to chew...or destroy and what is acceptable.....it needs lots of play.
Discipline, by withdrawing a puppy from roaming around the house alone....and putting the puppy in the house, can add years of happiness to your life....please do not punish as they really cannot understand humans.....but they do get the abuse thing!
2006-11-05 10:15:07
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answer #2
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answered by May I help You? 6
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You train your puppy the same way you potty train a baby.... slowly, and with tenderness and love. I have had dogs around the house f or over thirty years, and the only time we ever had "accidents" was right at the beginning as the little guy was getting the hang of it. But I did find it helpful to put some newspapers down on the floor with a little bit of captured peepees sprinkled on it. Puppies seem to r espond to that, smelling the pee and connecting it in their minds with "a place to go" You might spread a sheet of thin plastic under the newspapers, so anything that does go through stops there.
The other thing to do is to tenderly carry "baby" outside at particular times... like after he has eaten, or you have caught him taking a drink. This way he will gradually associate the outside with being where you a re supposed to go to relieve yourself.
When you do get a "little accident" do not scold him, smack him or call him "bad" You wouldn't do that with a young baby, because you know babies can't help it. Neither can puppies. Be sure and praise him lavishly,coo nice things at him just the way you would a human baby, when he "gets it right". Follow these basic rules and I promise it will not be long before he will be telling YOU that he wants to go outside to "take care of business"
2006-11-05 10:15:25
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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To house train a puppy there are many different ways. If it goes inside you should pick it up by it's neck (there is a lot of extra skin there and it will not hurt it, this is how it's mother will pick it up) and bring it outside. You must yell at it only if you catch it in the act. That is crucial! Also tone is everything your voice must sound loud, mean, and strict. This will alert the puppy that it has done something wrong there for teaching him/her not to do that. Also kenneling it will help because it will not go in it's bed.
2006-11-05 10:09:41
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answer #4
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answered by Joshua S 2
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First, you need to crate train your puppy so you can put him in a crate when you're not home and at night. Once your puppy is old enough to be past the chewing stage and is reliably house trained, you don't need to confine him to a crate any more.
When you are home, you need to keep the puppy in the room you're in so you can keep an eye on him. Take him out after a nap, after hard playing, after a drink, or if he just hasn't been out for a while. You didn't say how old your puppy is, but I'm assuming very young. Young puppies have no more bladder control than a baby so it's up to you to be very watchful. They also don't give signals when very young, they just squat and pee, so take him out often.
You need to go out with him, say "go pee", and give lots and lots of praise the very second he pees, then come right back in. This way he learns to tell the difference between potty time outside and play time.
When he has an accident, quietly clean it up, unless you catch him in the act. Then tell him no, very firmly, and take him out. If he finishes outside, give lots of praise.
Dogs learn very quickly through positive reinforcement, rather than punishment. If you're very vigilant, give lots of praise and are consistent, your puppy can learn real fast. You have to be patient, though, it takes time for them to have control of their bladders. Good luck!
2006-11-05 10:09:43
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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we have two dogs that we crate trained, it was the easiest house breaking ever. had other dogs in the past and tried the old fashion way wasnt to successful. i highly reccomend using a crate. dogs in the wild are den dwellers, crating them is sort like a natural enstict to them, as puppies their mothers takes care of that til they are a certain age after that they are not allowed to & wont potty where they sleep. good luck
2006-11-08 14:36:57
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Make sure they are given ample time after each feeding, to go outside and reward with lots of love. Also try puppy wee wee pads sold at most stores, and leave by door so they learn to ask to go out.
2006-11-05 10:03:17
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answer #7
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answered by spiderlady 1
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at 3 months a domestic dog ought to have the flexibility to hold its bladder for a million hour consistent with each and each month that's previous. so 3 months=3hrs 5months=5hrs until 365 days. Take it out perfect after it eats and each half-hour to an hour. doggies do no longer sniff for a niche...they simply bypass. quickly the domestic dog will study the place to bypass and you will initiate seeing a sniffing trend initiate. This takes time a sufferers. are not getting mad on the domestic dog. Its merely doing what or no longer that's responsive to to do. in case you get mad and by way of it outdoors that's going to start to think of that going out is a punishment, and not "ask" to bypass out. you ought to use the artwork NO to startle the domestic dog yet do no longer scold. What I actual have executed became to hold a small Christmas bell down by way of the floor and as quickly as I take the domestic dog out I ask "you decide directly to bypass outdoors" and merely until now I placed her out...I rang the bell. Took some month yet now, while she has to bypass out she makes use of her nostril to ring the bell and that i enable her out....that's tremendously cool.
2016-12-10 03:12:17
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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You'll have to spend a couple of days with the dog 24 hours a day. Watch where he goes and just before he's able to lift his leg, take him out. After he goes outside, positive reinforcement.
2006-11-06 06:23:04
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answer #9
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answered by Ms. K 4
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I know how to house train a puppy! Shoot it! (i have issues with dogs... they hate me and i hate them back... sorry if that offended you)
2006-11-05 10:05:29
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answer #10
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answered by Brisingr Vanyali 1
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