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How to Housebreak
Your Dog
Dog Article courtesy of I-Love-Dogs.com
First, don't think that you are being mean to your dog by
training him or her. Dogs are pack animals by nature. They need to belong
to a pack. When your dog became part of your household your dog became
part of your pack.
That makes you the Alpha Dog - the Leader of your pack.
Your dog wants you to be the leader. Your dog wants to know that
there is a strong Alpha Dog giving orders and keeping the pack in line.
The very first thing you need to do as the leader of your pack
is to housebreak your dog. In the wild, dogs (wolves) are trained early
not to do their business in the pack's den, and it is vital that you train
your dog not to do its business in your den (your house).
Most dog experts agree that the best age to housebreak a puppy
is between 8 and 12 weeks old.
If you are housebreaking a puppy, one of the best ways is to use
a crate. Believe it or not, puppies like crate training. For a dog a crate
is like its ancestral den and the confined space in a crate gives your
puppy a sense of security and safety.
NEVER use the crate to punish your puppy. The crate is NOT a
jail. Your puppy's crate is its happy and safe home. Never lock a young
puppy in a crate for more than 2 hours - three hours tops in an emergency.
Puppies won't make a mess in their sleeping area unless you
leave them locked up for too long at a time, which is why the crate makes
such a good tool for housebreaking. Leave your puppy in its crate for two
hours and then take it out of its crate and lead it outside to the area
where you want it to do its mess.
As it does its mess say the words "Hurry Up" and then praise
your puppy, possibly even give your puppy a small treat on occasion. By
using the words "Hurry Up" as your puppy is doing its business you train
it to associate the words "Hurry Up" with doing its business. Later,
especially on cold, dark winter nights you'll appreciate the fact that the
words "Hurry Up" will shorten your "walk" time considerably!
Always take your puppy out the same door and to the same area
each time. This will teach your puppy to scratch at the same door when it
needs to go out and it will make your future clean ups quicker and easier.
Try to take your dog outside to do its business at the same time
each day. Dogs, like most humans, feel most comfortable when they have a
routine to follow.
Unless you catch your dog in the act of making a mess, do NOT
scold your dog for making a mess in the house. Rubbing your dog's nose in
a puddle of pee even a few minutes after the act does NOT teach your dog
not to pee in the house - it only CONFUSES your dog.
If you CATCH your dog IN THE ACT of making a mess in the house
grab the dog's collar and yank on it, saying the word "NO!" in a DEEP and
STERN voice and then lead your dog to the outside area where you are
training it to go to the bathroom. When your dog does its business, praise
your dog (and don't forget to use the words "Hurry Up" as it is doing its
business).
If your puppy is running around the house free keep an eye on it
and learn to recognize the signs when it is about to make a mess. It might
start circling an area, or it might start sniffing its nose close to the
floor, or it may begin walking in a different way. Almost all dogs give
some kind of a signal before they are going to mess. Learn to pick up on
your dog's signal and then pull them by the collar to the outdoor area
where you want them to go.
You're going to have to be a little patient. Your puppy will
have accidents. Your puppy, after all, still has puppy-brains and it will
take a certain amount of time before the neurons begin to click in that
little brain and the light bulb suddenly lights up and your puppy says
"Oh, that's what you want me to do!"
Article Source:
http://www.i-love-dogs.com/dogsarticles/housebreaking-your-dog.html |