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I just recently adopted a one year old basset mix, and she was said to be house trained but she has been peeing everywhere, even right after we bring her outside (which most of the time its over half an hour walks 3 to 4 times a day and sometimes she doesnt do anything)and its not in the same places. I've noticed a few of those times she peed when she was scared or excited. Would I be able to train her to get out of that habit? Also, any tips on training her so she doesn't go to the bathroom in the house?

2007-12-19 08:33:32 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Dogs

16 answers

Do NOT scold or hit (don't ever hit your dog) your dog when she urinates because of excitement or fear. That is the perfect way to make that behavior continue. If she is doing it, you need to be calm, and ignore the behavior.

For potty training...if you catch her in the act of urinating in the house, say a firm "no," then immediately take her outside. When she does potty outside, praise her like there is no tommorrow. She needs to be taught what you expect of her. When she realizes she gets rewarded for pottying outside...she will be more than glad to do it again!

2007-12-19 08:44:48 · answer #1 · answered by KS 7 · 3 0

First, have her checked by the vet to rule out any medical issues.

Some dogs will pee when scared or excited. The best thing for that is to be as calm as possible, and they will usually grow out of it.

Otherwise, just do regular housebreaking as if she were a puppy. Supervise her when she's inside. Reward her for doing her business outside. Try taking her to the same place, use a command word/phrase ("go pee" "hurry up"), so that she associates that place and word with peeing. Then go for a walk. Be very enthusiastic with your praise when she does the right thing, perhaps even give her a treat.

Just because she was house trained to her old home, doesn't mean she understands she has to be clean in yours. Dogs don't generalize well, and Bassets are known to be difficult to housebreak.

Obedience class will help to build her confidence.

2007-12-19 09:19:08 · answer #2 · answered by DaBasset - BYBs kill dogs 7 · 1 0

If she is peeing when she excited or nervous, this is her way of saying, immediately, "you are the boss and I give in!", and so punishing her is the wrong thing to do! If you punish her, she will just pee more, because she feels that she will have to get her message across in a bigger way. Some dogs grow out of this, and some dogs don't.

If she is having accidents in the house "just because", it might be simply because she is in a new house. Sometimes switching environments can be stressful and they will revert to bad habits. Just keep up the potty training and taking her out after naps, after she eats, etc with lots of praise when she does things right and she should go back to her potty training days pretty quickly.

2007-12-19 10:01:00 · answer #3 · answered by bpbjess 5 · 0 0

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/aL7BB

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.

2016-05-14 23:47:05 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

When my puppy went to the bathroom outside, i would give him a treat. He understood that bathroom outside was because he was rewarded. If he made a mistake in the house, i was stern with him (but i didn't hit him. I never hit dogs.) After a while, i got off the treats and he's well potty trained now.

As for the excitement, my puppy did that as well. It's one of those things that you can't really stop at first. He's excited! After he's potty trained for a bit, it starts to go away. You can't get angry at them for being excited, really.

Good luck!!

2007-12-19 08:45:43 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There is also a condition that affects spayed females that causes them to leak but this normally happens when they sleep. Talk to your vet to see if this could be a possibility. Other than that it sounds like submissive urination. As mentioned above, do not make a fuss over her when you come home, don't raise your voice (yell) at her. Submissive dogs don't need harsh corrections. Also, she is adapting to a new environment and this is very stressfull - that combined with a submissive temperament is likely the cause. She is probably overwhelmed. This will subside, if it is only submissive urination and not the condition I described above. Just be patient and she will work things out.

2007-12-19 09:26:44 · answer #6 · answered by tipschihuahuas 2 · 1 0

You just have to be constant. She need constant walks and you need to give her affection when she is good and NO AFFECTION when she is bad. Don't hit her, just ignore her.

When you come in after being gone, do not speak to her, do not talk to her, do not pet her, do not make eye contact. Walk past like she is not there. Take away the exciting of your coming home. Have everyone else use this same approach. After you are home and she is being good, they pet her.

Get a word that you use to take her outside. We say, "let's check the back". My dogs know that means go pee. But it sounds nicer when company is there. When you take her out say your words and put a small bell at the back door low to the ground. Ring the bell when you take her out. Eventually, ring the bell with her foot when you go out. Eventually, she will ring the bell to tell you she wants out.

Don't ignore her. When she makes a mistake it is YOUR mistake not hers. And dont "rub her nose in it"

Be sure her accident spots are CLEAN, bleached even, or they will invite her back.

Luck

2007-12-19 08:57:13 · answer #7 · answered by Lyn B 6 · 2 0

sounds like she has incontinence... sadly, most dogs like that are "culled" - put to sleep as soon as it's found out, while still with their mothers.

I have never heard of any techniques to stop that behavior, your vet may be able to perscribe some medication for it (it's just a weak bladder, the meds increase control of it), or you could get your dog accustomed to whatever's scaring them.

I had a beautiful 3 yr old german shephard mix, very well trained, but then I got a bf whose idea of getting her attention was to shake a large vitamin bottle at her, right in her face. It startled her so much, that she would pee on the floor - especially if she was waiting to go outside. He did it so much, she would pee if she was sitting at the door, waiting for someone to open it, and he rushed at her. He'd start yelling, then, and she'd get even more scared - she had NEVER been scared of anyone or anything before, or ever have issues peeing. (kicked that guy to the curb, btw... lol)

2007-12-19 08:48:16 · answer #8 · answered by Carlii 4 · 1 2

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2016-05-30 18:00:56 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2015-01-27 08:51:09 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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