Learn what your puppy needs in his diet to become a great do. More on www.eukanuba.com
Duration : 0:6:12
Learn what your puppy needs in his diet to become a great do. More on www.eukanuba.com
Duration : 0:6:12
29 Jul 2009
Get video training to the best dog potty training methods.
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Learn the best methods to dog potty training. DO you have a puppy that is in bad need of some dog potty training. Get video training right here about dog potty training.
House Training A Dog: Potty Training for Puppies and Older Dogs
Then repeat over and over “Go Potty” (or your own word or phrase) and stay in that spot for at least 15 minutes. Don’t allow your dog to play or get any
Potty Training Dogs: How to Do It
Potty Training Dogs: How to Do It, with Advice and Tips.
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If you were hoping that a few puppy potty training tips are enough to successfully housetrain your dog, you are in for a surprise
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Real puppy potty training Solutions that Work Now.These Gentle and Effective methods make difficult puppy potty problems disappear.
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Dog Training Basics - Potty Training Basics
Training tips and problem solving for one of the toughest training challenges - housebreaking!
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Housetraining Your Dog
Download the Free Report And Start Potty Training Your Dog, TODAY! We have been in the dog training business that long to know that potty training takes dogpottytrain
Puppy Potty Training - 10 Sure-Fire Tips For Success
Jun 17, 2008 … A few simple ideas can make a big difference to how successful your puppy potty training will be Features your dog potty must have:
Duration : 0:5:8
28 Jul 2009
Potty Training A Puppy“>Potty training a puppy can sometimes be a daunting task for the first-time puppy owner, especially if you have little to no experience with dogs. The effort, however, is well worth it all when you consider the security you will get knowing you won’t have to clean up after a whole mess of poo in and around your house.
So without further ado, here are a few simple tips to help teach your little pup where to go when he has to go:
1. Reserve a lot of time for the potty training process. A few days up to a week is more than enough for your puppy to learn where to go, but you need to ensure that you spend this time carefully supervising the puppy. This is especially true after it eats, wakes up or has gone through a few hours without excreting. Taking a few days off from work or sucking the time away from your vacation will be for nothing if you don’t keep a careful eye on your puppy, so keep the puppy in sight at all times.
2. Know when a puppy is going to go and you will be able to speed up the training process while preventing an accident from happening. When a dog has to go, it will start sniffing the ground and go around in circles. Once you spot this, immediately pick the puppy up and bring it to its potty spot. This is precisely why you need to keep your untrained puppy in sight at all times.
3. Keep a crate or cage ready when you have to go to sleep or leave the house. Dogs don’t like to excrete near their sleeping area, which makes a crate or cage perfect for the potty training process when you need to turn in for the night. This also teaches them the ability to hold in their poo or pee for a period of time, which is a plus when you let the puppy sleep indoors.
4. Acknowledge the power of words when it comes to cueing your puppy. Use a phrase like “go outside” or “do your thing” as the puppy urinates or defecates. After about a dozen or so times, the dog will begin to pick up on the verbal cue. This verbal cue increases your influence on the pup’s timing of when to excrete and is easy to reinforce while Potty Training Puppies.
5. Remember that puppies have a low attention span and be careful with your rewards and punishments. You only have 30 seconds, give or take, to reinforce or punish a behavior. If you spot a “puddle” or “landmine” somewhere inside your home, don’t go around whaling on your puppy. They would not know why they are being punished, and they would end up neurotic. Likewise for rewards.
So there you have it, five simple tips to help you in potty training a puppy. Keep them in mind, and you will have a puppy who knows where to go when he has to go!
Potty training a puppy is never an easy thing, especially when you are working with your first puppy ever. It is almost as if you are taking care of a human baby, when you think about it. You have to feed it on time, you have to watch it lest it makes a mess at the end of the day, you have to keep it in a crate or box at night if you want to sleep in peace, you praise or scold it depending on where it does its business, and you have to scoop or wipe away any “accidents” in the process.
And like human babies, you can actually talk to puppies as well.
Okay, so you cannot expect a decent answer from a dog, much less a puppy. Your voice, however, does leave an imprint on its mind whenever you praise or scold it. A single phrase like “do your business, boy” or “off you go, girl” helps to encourage the puppy to go to a certain spot to do its business.
This is how it works.
First off, you have to choose a phrase to use. “Do your thing,” “do your business” and “off you go” are just some phrases you can use to tell your pet to go and do its thing in its potty or outdoors.
Once you have made your selection, you have to repeat it every single time your puppy does its business. This is to firmly imprint the words on the puppy’s mind, transforming it from a simple sound to a command telling the puppy to go do its business in that particular spot.
Oh, and one more thing. You need to know when your puppy is planning to do its business.
When a puppy feels like pooing, it will sniff then circle a particular spot in the floor. This is a sure-fire sign that it is going to defecate. If your puppy sniffs a standing item or a particular spot on the wall, then you have to watch out for it to pee.
While you are Potty Training A Puppy, it would be best for you to pick up your puppy before it does its thing and then move it to the spot where it should do its business. Once you have the puppy securely on the spot, you can then go on and give your verbal command just before it goes off on the newspaper, pad, or dirt.
Keep this up for a few days while you potty train your dog with the usual methods. The end result is a potty-trained puppy that responds to your verbal commands if and when it has to go and do its thing. Now you have a degree of control over the puppy during and out of the potty training process.
Remember to add some verbal commands when Potty Training Puppies, and you will find the job a whole lot easier and more interactive than you thought it could be.
23 Jul 2009
Puppy Prodigies neo-natal and early learning program.
Training of puppies 9-10 weeks old
23 Jul 2009
House training your puppy is easier if you know these few tips More tips can be found at http://luvurdog.com/dogtraining
Duration : 0:3:31
16 Jul 2009
Getting a puppy isn’t just fun and games, there is a certain amount of responsibility in maintaining them with perhaps none more frustrating than potty training puppies. It’s not like you can tell them to use the bathroom whenever they feel like relieving themselves, even if you get to pull that off, good luck in getting them to flush the toilet after using it.
No worries though because there are certain steps you can follow in making sure that your puppies relieve themselves when you want them to and where you want them to and it doesn’t involve the use of hypnosis or acquiring the services of a snake charmer. You might even be surprised as to how easy it is to potty train a puppy. Just how easy? Well easy enough to summarize in three steps:
Three Easy Steps For Potty Training Puppies
1. Schedule the meals to influence the call of nature - There is a certain amount of time a puppies digestive system takes to complete its cycle and get from meal to waste. This varies from puppy to puppy so monitor the amount of time it takes your puppy to relieve itself after a full meal. It may take several monitoring sessions to determine the average amount of time but once you get it then proceed to step two.
2. Take the business inside or outside - Figure out whether you want your puppy to do its business inside your house or outdoors. Keep in mind that what is important is what is convenient to you because you can go either way. Whether you are potty training puppies indoors or outdoors you would still have to clean up after it.
3. Paper or plastic - If you’re going to train your puppies to do its business indoors then you need a liberal amount of newspaper and scent spray which is available in most pet stores.
a. Whenever your puppy needs to relieve itself lay down a generous stack of newspapers and spray a small amount of scent spray on it.
b. Restrict the puppy within the newspaper covered area and wait until it relieves itself. Right after it does let it smell the scent sprayed on the newspaper.
c. Repeat b until your puppy gets used to the newspaper or the scent it will look for either of the two next times it needs to relieve itself.
If you are training the puppy to do its business outdoors then just take it out for a walk. It will eventually find a spot after a while and assume the position. Do not forget to clean up after your puppy. Sooner or later when the puppy gets used to this system it will show signs of wanting to go outside when it feels the urge to commune with nature.
And there you have it three sure fire easy steps for Potty Training Puppies. It doesn’t cost much; it doesn’t take rocket science, not even awkwardly expensive gadgets - just a good amount of patience.
10 Jul 2009
An introduction to puppy potty training and getting your puppy house broken.
Duration : 0:1:45
10 Jul 2009
Who else wants their dog to be well behaved around people and other dogs? AND have them obey all of your house rules… even when you’re not around!
If your answer is “Me!” then you’re about to discover information about how to put an end to your dog’s behavior problems once and for all using proven techniques that give you immediate results. Click here for more information.
10 Jul 2009
Crate training is one of the best possible things that you can do for your puppy. Not only will the puppy be easier to housetrain but overall you will have a happier, more secure dog that has his or her own place to sleep and stay both when you are home and when you are away. Crate training is also an asset when you plan to travel with your dog or puppy. Crate training keeps the animal calm on airplanes and also keeps you pet safe when driving. Crates can be attached to seats by seatbelts and harnesses similar to how children’s car seats are fastened into the car. Just like car seats they prevent injury to the dog in the case of a sudden stop or an accident.
Crate training does not happen overnight, and does require both work and attention by the owner. Crate training should never be used as a punishment for a mistake or a bad behavior, or the dog or puppy will see the crate as a bad place and this will defeat the whole purpose of the training. To start the crate training in the most positive way start very slowly and only progress at the rate the puppy is comfortable with.
Picking The Right Size Crate
Depending on how large your puppy will get it will usually make sense to buy the size that will fit the full sized dog rather than having to buy multiple crates as your puppy grows. It is important, however, if the puppy is small and the crate is larger that you limit the space in the crate for the small puppy or he or she will simply use one end for the bathroom and one end as the “den”. To make a large crate smaller a mesh screen or piece of wood can be used and then slide to give more room as the puppy matures. When necessary it can be completely removed to give the older dog full use of the crate area.
The idea size of crate, or crate area, is about the length of the dog when it is down, paws extended. Most crates come in standard widths that will allow small dogs to really stretch out but may require larger dogs to sleep in a coiled position. Dogs should be able to stand up comfortably in the crate without the top of the crate pressing on their head or shoulders.
Giant or very large breeds of dogs will generally outgrow most commercial crates before they completely mature. Some specially made crates for large breeds are available on the internet and through breed associations or even pet stores.
Getting Started
Getting started means just familiarizing the puppy with the crate. Make sure the crate is the correct size and that there is comfortable bedding in the crate. Start by sitting with the puppy in front of the open crate. Place a treat, with the puppy seeing the placement, into the very front of the crate. When the puppy reaches in to get the treat say “Crate” and the puppy’s name, just once. Allow the puppy to take the treat out of the crate, and do not close the door. Do not try to keep the puppy in the crate longer and make no comment when the puppy exits the crate. Next time repeat the process putting the treat in far enough the puppy must step in completely. Again, when approaching the crate say “Crate” and the puppy’s name, and then say “Good Dog” and the puppy’s name when they are in the crate. Allow them to exit when they want and ignore the exiting behavior.
Gradually feed a few treats through the side of the crate to encourage the puppy to stay. Always allow him or her to exit when they want, but only praise the going in behavior, never the coming out!
Within a few days the puppy will be comfortable in the crate for a few minutes. Try closing the door but only for a minute at a time, staying right beside the crate. With the puppy’s comfort level leave the crate door closed for longer periods and begin to move away for a few seconds, gradually lengthening the time.
Never return and open the crate when the puppy starts to whine or bark, as this will encourage this behavior. Wait until the puppy is quiet before taking him or her out of the crate. Never leave a puppy in the crate for more than 2 to 4 hours at a time, especially when they are small and are not yet housetrained.
Kelly Marshall
http://www.articlesbase.com/pets-articles/guide-to-crate-training-a-new-dog-or-young-puppy-94755.html