Dog Training – House Training Your Dog
One of the most confusing and anxiety-ridden areas of dog
training is house training.
Yet, it is one of the most important, especially for the humans
involved.
The best way to understand and find success with house training
is to use the dog’s own nature to help you.
Dogs are, by instinct, very clean animals. They would rather not
soil any areas where they normally sleep or eat. Dogs are also
creatures of habit --- they like to know where they’re supposed to
go urinate and defecate. If the dog is taught to eliminate on
gravel or concrete, they will tend to look for either of those
surfaces to do so. If they’re taught to eliminate on grass or dirt,
that’s where they will choose. Use these habits to your
advantage.
Setting up the training area
This is the first step. Make sure the area you choose is small
and confined. A bathroom works for this, or a place in a kitchen or
garage also work well. Remember that crate training works well for
puppies or small dogs, but for the larger animals, the crate is too
confining.
You need to spend some time with this aspect of the training.
You need to play with your dog in this area, and this is also where
the dog will be taught to sleep and eat. Put together a special
bed. This can be something you make up with items around the house,
or you can go to the store and purchase a bed. Don’t worry of your
dog eliminates in this area at first. Once they figure out that
this is where the sleep and eat, they’ll stop eliminating
there.
Once your dog realizes that the bed is for sleeping, you can
begin to move it around the house. But, only when you’re there.
When you’re not, put the bed back in the training area.
Setting up the toilet area
Now you need to determine where the toilet area is going to be
located. Presumably, this will be outside the house. Wherever it
is, it has to a place that the dog can go to whenever it needs to
go. You need to go there with your dog so you can give the
appropriate rewards for good behavior.
Establish a set feeding schedule for your dog. If the dog is in
the habit of being fed at certain times, the natural process of
elimination will also begin to occur at certain times. Once you
learn when those times relate to the eating times, it will become
much easier for you to guide the dog to the established toilet
area.
Don’t forget to make sure your dog has ready access to the
toilet area. That way mistakes aren’t as likely to occur.
Continuing the house training process
Once your dog is in the habit of eliminating in the toilet area
and not in the sleeping/eating area, you can begin to extend the
training area to the rest of the house. Do this slowly. Start by
expanding to one additional room, and then gradually expand into
other areas. Don’t expand into new areas until you’re sure your dog
has control of its bladder and bowels. At first, do this only when
you’re around. If you’re away, then put your dog back in the
original training area.
Speeding up the process
If you have to move this process along more quickly, you can do
so. Remember to proceed with caution, though. It’s better to go
slowly than to have to try to retrain a dog later. If you’re going
to try to speed things up, you will have to be there in order to
reward your dog for successful eliminations. It is also important
not to punish for mistakes. That will only confuse the dog and slow
the process even further.
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