the experts say tether a lead to your hip and the pup so he is NOT ever out of your sight to urinate of defecate. get him out when he looks like he is gonna go, and give positive praise and a small treat each time he goes. That will reinforce a positive message to him.Crate training is a great idea at night and while you are away as not to ruin your house. Your pup will become accustomed to it if you put toys, kongs , treat balls in there. Eventually he will think of it like a"den" happy safe place.
Good luck to you. remeber to be real patient. ;)
2006-12-09 02:04:09
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answer #1
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answered by Summerfest 2
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Be patient he's still a baby.
If you see your pup about to eliminate somewhere other than the designated area, interrupt him immediately. Say "wait, wait, wait!" or clap your hands loudly to startle her into stopping. Carry your pup, if his still small enough, or take his collar and lead him to the correct area. Once your pup is in the potty area, give him the command to eliminate. Use a friendly voice for the command, then wait patiently for him to produce. Your pup may be tense because you've just starled him and may have to relax a bit before he's able to eliminate. When he does his jib, include the command word in the praise you give" good potty".
But remember, no punishment!
Or Take your pup and a paper towel to the mess. Point to the urine or feces and calmly tell your pup, "no potty here." Then scoop or sop up the accident with the paper towel. Take the evidence and your pup to the approved potty area. Drop the mess on the ground and tell the dog, " good potty here," as if he had done the deed in the right place. If your puppy sniffs at the evidence, praise him calmly. If the accident happened very recently your dog may not have to go yet, but wait with him a few minutes anyway. If he eliminates, praise him. Afterwards, go finish cleaning up the mess.
Soon your puppy will understand that there is a place where you are pleased about elimination and other places where you are not. Praising for elimination in the approved place will help your puppy remember the rules.
2006-12-09 03:53:39
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answer #2
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answered by W0615 4
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The first answer is sooooo right! You must be consistant. Paper training or pad training is fine, if you confine the pup to that area and let it out on a regular schedule. Dogs need to trust your schedule. If tey feel that they cannot trust you to come back in a certain time frame, they will give up and mess the crate or the paper.
Be patient.
Personally, I always started small pups out in a cardboard box lined with lots of paper and took them out every 2-3 hours in the daytime, after each meal, first thing in the morning and right before bed. At night, I'd cover the box and set up a tick-tock clock next to it for soothing. Eventually, they would get used to holding it for that length of time and I could extend the time frame slowly. Until recently, I'd never had a dog that needed a real crate.
If you are patient and stick to a plan and a schedule, there is no reason a pup can't get trained. Just take a deep breathe and remind yourself that it will get better.
Don't forget to reward the pup when it does perform outside or go all night without soiling. Positive Positive ....
2006-12-09 02:12:18
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answer #3
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answered by Army family. 3
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Crate your pup!
No this is not cruel, by crating your pup you create a den very similar to how your puppy would have been raised. Make sure the crate is large enough for your pup to get in and turn around in, but if it is too large the pup will designate 1/2 of the area as a potty and the other half as his sleeping area.
Pups will not pee or poop where they are sleeping, after being in the crate an hour then take your pup out and go straight outside, untill he goes.
Learn more about crate training at petco.com I think they have a pretty good section on learning.
2006-12-09 02:01:03
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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There are several things you can do:
1) Put the dog on a feeding schedule. Rather than leaving a bowl of food out for it all day, let the dog eat twice a day, once in the morning and once in the late afternoon. This will help "condition" its bowels to work at specific times of the day. (If you leave food out for the dog all day, it will have to poop all day.)
2) Remember that dogs usually have to go potty about 10-15 minutes after they eat, wake up from a nap, or get up in the morning. Be diligent, and make sure to take dog outside at these opportune moments. Praise the dog whenever it potties outside to reinforce the behavior.
3) Don't use training pads; these teach the dog to eliminate inside the house. You want to train it to go OUTSIDE.
4) Watch your dog. Right before they squat to poop, dogs will walk in tight circles with their nose to the ground. This is their signal that they're looking for a good place to eliminate. Whenever you see this behavior say something like, "Potty outside" or "do you need to go outside?" and take the dog out immediately. The dog will eventually connect your spoken cue with the act of going outside for potty. Again, praise the dog whenever it goes potty outside.
5) Keep in mind that puppies have no conscious control of their bowels or bladder until they're about 4 months old (so crate training does NOT work for very young pups). You should still start training your dog to go outside before that time, but don't be surprised if the pup has a few accidents (if it's still very young.)
Never yell at, spank, or slap your dog, and don't push its face into its messes. This does nothing except to make your dog fearful of you. If you are consistent, calm and firm, your dog will respect you as its alpha and take its behavioral cues from you.
2006-12-09 02:28:33
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answer #5
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answered by Fetch 11 Humane Society 5
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Please do not harm your pooch. asserting which you are going to be strolling including your domestic dog exterior on a leash. not basically will this prepare him to be on a leash, and get him used to it. that is going to provide him a because of the fact that of there being a purpose for being exterior. Take the domestic dog exterior each 2-3 hours and inspire the domestic dog to potty. while the domestic dog potties at modern-day compliment the domestic dog and tell him he's sweet, and supply him a cope with. while your exterior shop telling the domestic dog to pass potty. while your domestic dog potties on the floor do not pay any unfavorable or beneficial interest to the domestic dog and take it exterior and tell him to potty. If he does not after approximately quarter-hour then carry him back in and don't provide the domestic dog affection until you get him to potty exterior, 2 hours later. If he potties on the floor in the previous the two hours are up, then at modern-day take the domestic dog exterior and tell him to potty there. If all of this redundancy does not artwork, then i might enforce it with crate guidance. nonetheless shop taking the domestic dog out each 2-3 hours and after food. As reported above, i in my view like the bell concept! And keeping an eye on dozing conduct is likewise a very good concept.
2016-10-18 00:38:02
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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You should keep this puppy, what I would do is is get the puppy training pads and everytime you see your puppy about to pee bring him to the pad and as he is going pee say "potty" over and over again. Once he starts going to the pad by himself. try moving the pad closer and closer to the doog, about a couple inches every day. Once it is next to the door bring him out side and on a short leash and stay in one spot while saying "potty" over and over again. Once he does that praise him. eventually your dog will sit at the door when he needs to go out and you can just bring him on a leash and say the magic words and hopefully he will "go"
2006-12-09 02:14:08
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Keep trying the crate training. My puppy cried and whined at first to get out, but eventually they will stop. After I put him in there he would cry/bark for up to 15 minutes, then he'd calm down and go to sleep. It's important to remember NOT to let him out when he whines/barks, because it just teaches him that he is the leader of you, and next time he wants something he just has to whine and cry and you will do it.
After days/weeks the time it took for him to calm down continued to improve. Try feeding him in his crate, and giving him treats when he goes in there.
Now my dog doesn't make a peep in his crate, even when he has to go to the bathroom, he holds it and waits until I take him out.
2006-12-09 02:13:31
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answer #8
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answered by Chad 1
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You have to be consistant. Pick ONE method of training and stick to it. By changing every method, you're just confusing the dog and he will never learn.
You can't expect him to learn over night either. Depending on his breed it can take weeks or even months to potty train!
2006-12-09 01:58:09
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answer #9
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answered by lunar_flame 3
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its normal you cant really train them until thier about one year old my puppy whos % months still isnt trained
2006-12-09 02:03:49
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answer #10
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answered by Chloe P 1
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