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I will let her out for as long as an hour and she will come inside and poo in the house within 5 minutes. She also poo's outside. Why does she keep doing it inside. It's like it just falls out will be walking by and doing it. She also pee's inside from time to time but not as often as pooing.

2007-01-19 05:47:59 · 14 answers · asked by jlbk2000 1 in Pets Dogs

14 answers

Go outside with her and make sure she poops outside. Stay outside until she goes. Then let her inside. Make sure you take her out about 30 minutes after she eats and anytime after she wakes from a nap!

Good luck!

2007-01-19 05:55:09 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Hi, your problem is a common one. Do you have your dog on a set feeding schedule? A feeding shedule will stimulate her/his bowels to get moving soon after she/ he is done eating and once on a regular shedule your dog should become regular. If your dog is the type who picks at her food through out the day this could actually triggering the bowl movments. So, say you feed in the AM and she eats and walks away leaving some food behind you should pick the bowl up and throw it out. Then do a PM feeding, do the same if any is left over. Important: FEED AROUND THE SAME TIME EVERYDAY! She will learn to eat all of the food given at one time. Make sure you are also not overfeeding. Does he/she soil in the house if / when left alone in the house? Some times dog will poop out of fear, or anxiety brought on by the owner leaving the house. Have you talked to your Vet about this? Just to rule out any physical problems and plus they may have more answers. The bottom line is behavior change, which mean the owner may have to change too. This is why its always a good idea to talk with your vet. They can steer you in the right direction. It is very frustrating, I know myself I have a dog who hates peeing out side when rainning and will hold it until no one is around a sneak a pee in the house. So I had to pick her up and put her outside and not let her in until she would go with in a 20 min period, I then would keep an eye on her 20 min later I would put back out side and reward her each time with a treat. When she finally went pee I praised her and gave treat. This seem to have worked.

Good luck to you and dont give up!

2007-01-19 06:17:47 · answer #2 · answered by kit 1 · 0 0

without assembly your canine that's annoying to tell precisely what the reason of this behaviour is yet listed under are some suggestions: a million - You dont say how long he's being left at residing house for. although a a million 365 days previous canine could be waiting to hold his wees and poos all night, if he's being left at residing house all day and spends a number of it leaping around the residing house to amuse himself that's inevitable that he will could pass bathroom after some hours. are you able to ruin the time up? If the reason of this is that he's being left at residing house for too long you will could provide the kitchen area an extremely stable sparkling and initiate bathroom preparation from scratch as he will have progressed a bad habit. Do a seek on google for some relatively stable articles on paper or crate preparation and initiate the device as quickly as obtainable. 2. he's weeing and pooing interior the residing house becase he's stressful. Your canine may be stressful while he's separated from you and a undemanding symptom of this is weeing and pooing while a canine is in any different case housetrained. different indicators incorporate unfavorable behaviour like digging furnishings, chewing and destroying products, barking or howling, and going loopy once you come back residing house. As your canine is youthful it will be much less complicated to help him with this difficulty yet i might back propose a seek on google under 'separation tension' except you could placed some greater information on your question.

2016-10-31 13:12:28 · answer #3 · answered by wolter 4 · 0 0

First, take her to vet to make sure nothing's wrong with her. If the vet rules out a medical reason for it, you can use crate training and other techniques to potty-train your pup. Unfortunately, just letting your dog out is not enough to stop inappropriate elimination behavior. You have to train your dog to go in the right place.

Dogs operate on a "What's in for me?" basis, and they use smells and routine to clue them in on how to behave. You've got to set it up so that going outside is a much more rewarding experience than going inside, and you have to establish a routine. Always take her out on a leash to the same spot to go potty, and at the same times of day if possible. Be patient, and avoid playing with her (if you do, she'll think it's play-time, not potty-time). If she goes, say the word "potty" in a happy voice, tell her she's a good girl (make a BIG fuss over her) and reward her. Don't yell at her when she goes inside, and buy a good enzyme cleaner, like Nature's Miracle, to clean up the stains thoroughly so that it she doesn't smell her waste in your house. If you follow this routine consistently, she should start acting right in regards to her pooing behavior.

Good luck! I have a two-year old cocker myself, and they're wonderful dogs. Enjoy yours!

2007-01-19 06:02:14 · answer #4 · answered by Danielle 3 · 0 0

well basic thing is u havent trained ur dog properly....try this....when she poo's inside the house dont yell at her.....jus stare at her for a while clean the mess and ignore her for a while...and when she poos outside praise her as much as u can and offer a treat or two...if u repeat this and be consistent she'll be house broken...and no matter how long it takes stay out till she poo's atleast in the nights when ull have time

2007-01-19 05:55:50 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would cage or kennel the dog while you are having the house breaking issues. Peeing and pooping in their kennel while they are in it is pretty unpleasant for them, and they won't do it, that's where he'll learn to hold it until it's appropriate to "go". Get into a regimen where you are caging them while you are gone, trying longer periods out of the cage as they stop having accidents and starting back over when they slip up. If you can catch him in the act, sternly say no, wrap him in the nose, take him outside. When he does his business outside profusely praise him and give him treats.

2007-01-19 06:01:25 · answer #6 · answered by schustercj 1 · 1 0

ii dont know what to tell you i have a snauzer i have had for 7 yrs now and cant get him to stop pooping in my basement its like he is addicted to it. i have had dogs my whole life and have had no trouble ever potty breaking any of the others. i finnally just had to build a heated/ air building outside for him. and i let him in only to play and when i am watching him.. the other night i let him in i went to get his snack and he was already down stairs pooping he wasnt even inside for 3 min when he did it so you cant tell me its because i didnt train him rite or something he does it just to be in control i think so i have no tips for y ou i hope someone elses suggestions will work for you..

2007-01-19 06:17:07 · answer #7 · answered by crazyme 5 · 0 0

She has never been properly house trained. Also, walking the dog helps. That way you know when dhe's gone and can tell her how great she is for doing it where she is susposed to. It's all about praise at the right time.

2007-01-19 05:58:35 · answer #8 · answered by Stick to Pet Rocks 7 · 0 0

call the vet ask them she may have a bladder problem dogs are very much like humans

2007-01-19 05:54:12 · answer #9 · answered by brown eyes 2 · 0 0

call her vet, it sounds like it could be an infection or possibly a disease of some sorts.

2007-01-19 05:57:36 · answer #10 · answered by searodent2001 2 · 0 0

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