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2007-03-01 10:35:38 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Dogs

17 answers

A puppy is like a baby. He will relieve himself anywhere, anytime. Because a newly adopted adult dog is unfamiliar with your home, he may not understand where he should "go"! Housetraining, or teaching your dog to go outside to relieve himself, is an important lesson your dog must learn.
It is up to you, the new parent, to housetrain your new puppy or dog with patience, love and understanding.
CRATE TRAINING
In the wild, wolves live in a den or cave. It is important the entire wolf pack keep this area clean. The same idea works with your family pet. Your dog’s crate is his home, his bedroom. It is likely that your dog will not like to soil his bed. Therefore, he will wait until he is let out to do his business.
HOUSETRAINING WITH YOUR CRATE
On average, puppies can hold their bladders one hour for every month they have been alive, plus one hour. For example, if you have a three month old puppy, he can wait 3 + 1 = 4 hours. If you work longer than this, the best solution is to have someone (a neighbour, a relative, a dog walker) come in at an appropriate time to let your dog out.

100 PER CENT SUPERVISION
Supervision is the key to housetraining! While you are at home, your dog must be supervised. Whether you are watching television, making dinner, on the phone or on the computer, your puppy must be watched. While it sounds like an impossible task, it isn’t. Keeping the crate in a social part of the house makes it easier. Using a house lead – a small, thin lead with a little clip on it – also helps immensely. Outside, you put a lead on your dog so you can control him. If the lead is removed after returning home, control is lost. For example, when watching television, have the lead tied to a couch leg. Your dog can have his blanket and toys with him. He’ll feel safe and comfortable. The majority of accidents happen when your pup wanders off and you haven’t noticed. You don’t want him to sneak off into the kitchen and find a puddle a short time later. If your pup is kept from wandering, the possibility of an accident is diminished because he will not eliminate where he is sitting. 100 per cent supervision means ensuring your dog is playing with you, in his crate, outside or on his house lead.

SCHEDULING
In the morning, take your dog outside. He should urinate and possibly have a bowel movement. Spend about five to seven minutes with him and then bring him in. Do not play with him yet. Feed him breakfast, either in the crate or with the lead, and supervise it. If your pup did not have a bowel movement earlier, take him back outside about 15 minutes after he has eaten. Use the lead to keep your pup moving along while outside. Otherwise, he may start sniffing, stopping and playing to avoid the job at hand. You can say “hurry up” and your dog will begin to associate these words with the task at hand. Praise him excessively when he has eliminated. Bring him back in the house and place him in his crate if you are going to work. Continue to supervise him with the crate or the lead if you are home. When returning after being out, go directly to the crate, let him out, praise him and put him back in. Feed him his meal, take him outside 15 minutes after he has eaten, praise him after he eliminates, and bring him back in. Continue to follow the same steps consistently.

While you are home, you should take your pup outside on a regular basis. Even if your pup is in a crate or on a house lead, he still needs the opportunity to eliminate. Also, be careful what you wish for! A pup who barks to go outside may be cute and clever now. However, you must try not to fall into the habit of leaping up every time your dog wants in or out. It is a very submissive gesture on your part. Have your pup wait a moment or two.

Setting up a schedule is also a good idea. If your pup is under four months of age, take him out for five minutes every hour on the hour. If your pup is over four months old, take him out every second hour on the hour. The schedule will help you remember when to take him out. Go out for five minutes only. It provides the opportunity to eliminate even if your pup may not need to go. Take your dog out after active play and also after napping. If an accident occurs, you may have forgotten to take him out .

FEEDING TIME
Having a puppy drink a lot of water and then placing him in his crate is much more unkind than letting him be a bit thirsty for an hour or two. Adult dogs should have access to drinking water at all times. However, this is not the case for untrained pups. Most parents will not allow their children to drink a big glass of water before going to bed. Avoid setting your pup up for failure. Restrict his water intake to three or four drinks daily and make sure you remove the water dish about three hours before bedtime. This will help your dog sleep more comfortably.

If it is a hot evening, supply your pup with a few ice cubes. They will enter your dog’s system at a slower pace. When feeding your pup, provide a high-quality food that is a good source of protein. The food must be concentrated so your puppy’s body doesn’t require much of it. If you feed less, your puppy eliminates less. Food is directly related to how well puppies do in their housetraining.

EXERCISE
It is important that your pup gets a lot of exercise, especially while crate training. You can play fetch, chase or hide and seek in your home. You can call ‘come’ at the same time to provide further training. Anyway you do it, your pup needs to be able to run and play.

2007-03-01 11:17:56 · answer #1 · answered by Shepherdgirl § 7 · 4 2

I have found the best way to toilet train a pup is by putting it in the garden from day one.I dont see the point of training a pup to use paper etc when eventually you will want it to go outside,its confusing for a pup.Before we even brang my pup in the house we put him in the garden and waited untill he went to the loo,he was house trained in 3 weeks of bringing him home.Everyone has there own preferences on how to toilet train,and its up to the individual owner on how they go around it.

2007-03-01 11:03:25 · answer #2 · answered by Heavenly20 4 · 0 0

Crate training, when you are not at home and as soon as you get home take them immediately out. When you are home take them out about every two hours or if they have an accident take them out immediately after. Don't use the punish them to harshly, they have short memory's if you punish them for a piddle you find later after they have already done it and rub their nose in it or swat with a paper they don't know what they have done and it only creates confusion. The main thing is patience and perseverance depending on the pup it may take some time but with love and a lot of patience it will happen

2007-03-04 07:36:56 · answer #3 · answered by TheatreFan 6 · 0 0

Take the pup out into your garden every 2hours or so and wait until it goes to the toilet. Then praise your pup once it has been to the toilet out side! you can also get puppy training pads for in your house. you could try them.

2007-03-04 07:14:35 · answer #4 · answered by Cherpy Chick 1 · 0 0

are you doing this precise? partly i'm now on my 0.33 lab, and that i be responsive to the place you're coming from. what i became into taught to do, and what i did, became into on a primary occurence, for a domestic dog this age, as quickly as each and every a million/2 an hour, take them out in =to the backyard and tell them the order 'busy' which potential to poo for the canine, while the canine ultimately doe's a poo in the backyard have some treats at modern available, and overeact in the compliment branch, everytime the canine doe's this act like tis. while the canine doe's it in the homestead, do no longer chastise it or call it undesirable canine, in simple terms compliment the place compliment is due, by utilising chastising a puppy at such an early age, you're drawing a line between you and it, in simple terms sparkling up the mess, say no longer something, after a pair of weeks it gets the message, and in simple terms keep the treats coming. in simple terms undergo in strategies that consistency, stable discipline, various primary(to no longer exertive) excercise, will turn it right into a stable grownup canine. the sole time you ought to use undesirable canine order, is while the canine is alot older, and additionally you have created your bonding with the canine, and it doe's do something fairly undesirable, like threaten the neighbour, or consume the fish out of the fishbowl or something. labs and collies are the two very attentive and intelegent canines, and in basic terms stay to be mans perfect buddy, and so which you may desire to reciprocrate and prepare them the thank you to be your canine, by utilising being a stable p.c.. chief, and not a tyrant.

2016-10-02 05:30:32 · answer #5 · answered by earles 4 · 0 0

its one of the hardest things to tell you the truth. I used to live in a one bedroom apartment with no balcony nor garden so for me that was traumatic (we eventually moved to a much bigger place and she now has a friend too....). I toilet trained her with newspaper on the floor. She was really good at doing it. She used to do it on the paper only. It takes time and patience but she eventually understood that she had to do it on the paper. Yes accidents did happen but, as you wouldn't smack a baby for pooing all the times, you shouldn't smack the dog nor put his nose in it. That its the biggest mistake you could ever do because they cant help it. They do not have the ability to work those muscles that keeps it in. Whoever said that stupid comment before its just an idiot. i'd love to smack him and rub HIS nose in his shit1!

2007-03-01 10:46:33 · answer #6 · answered by Val­­® 3 · 1 0

Do you mean house train a puppy or literally train it to relieve itself in a toilet?

If you mean the latter, it's not a smart idea. Toilets were made for humans, not puppies.

2007-03-01 10:42:58 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

patience, praise, dedication and committment ...take some days off, never scold or smack or shout and make it fun and reward him loads. Theres loads on the net about how to toilet train, just be absolutely dedicated and watch him like a hawk. Yes it is hard work but it pays off.

2007-03-01 13:35:15 · answer #8 · answered by rose_merrick 7 · 1 0

the best way i toilet trained my puppy ,
is to put newspaper in the kitchen then every day move closer to
the back door then eventually outside.

2007-03-05 00:14:01 · answer #9 · answered by CHRISTINE G37 1 · 0 0

Why do you want to toilet train him? Maybe one day you'll need the bathroom in a hurry but you'll have to wait for the dog to get out!!!

2007-03-01 10:43:15 · answer #10 · answered by Slave 2 · 2 0

ive got a friend whos just got a puppy from a breeder they told him to buy a small cage so if and when he messed put him into it for 5mins,he did this a few times the puppy (benji) did bark,yelp the usual but after 10 days he new what he was doing was wrong and never has touch wood did it again.never put your puppys nose into its urine etc this causes infection and never smack it for doing something as it will lose trustin you he knows nothing about whats right and wrong after all their like babys and need to learn and for you to teach.sorry for the essay.hope this helps

2007-03-01 10:46:21 · answer #11 · answered by easty90210 5 · 0 0

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