Jovitalk - Bon Jovi Fan Community
Home Register Members FAQ
 

Housebreaking a puppy...

NBJ - Everything Else


Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 10-28-2005, 03:40 AM
jenn1189's Avatar
jenn1189 jenn1189 is offline
Senior Member
Destination any Forum
 
Join Date: 03 Aug 2002
Location: Hot as Hell in Florida
Age: 48
Gender: female
Posts: 4,060
Send a message via AIM to jenn1189 Send a message via MSN to jenn1189
Default Housebreaking a puppy...

Does anyone have any great advice on housebreaking a puppy? I am having a horrible time getting Jersey to go outside. She can hold it, I know. She sleeps through the night and holds it in the crate when we are gone. She just isn't going to the door when she needs to go out. She just pees wherever she feels like it. If we take her every half hour or so, she's usually OK. But she is 4 months old now and should be able to hold it in a little better. I don't expect her to last all day without going out, but an hour or two would be nice!! Sometimes she goes 10 minutes after we bring her in. It's getting frustrating now. If she were going to the door and we ignored her, I could see her going inside, but she doesn't give any warning. Sometimes she sniffs around and I take her quick...but most times she just walks up to a spot and pees. HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Reply With Quote

  #2  
Old 10-28-2005, 04:11 AM
RyanBounce04 RyanBounce04 is offline
Senior Member
Jovi Geek
 
Join Date: 29 Jul 2002
Location: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Age: 35
Gender: male
Posts: 6,818
Send a message via AIM to RyanBounce04 Send a message via MSN to RyanBounce04 Send a message via Yahoo to RyanBounce04
Default

Puppy Pads! They give off a "smell" that's supposed to attract the Dog. Lay them on tile somewhere. It's a great seller at PetSmart. Also... Reward your dog everytime it uses the bathroom outside rather than in. Great habits!

Ryan
__________________
Dallas Cowboys - 2007 NFC East Champions
Boston Red Sox - 2007 World Series Champions
Florida State Seminoles - 2000 National Champions
Tampa Bay Lightning - 2004 Stanley Cup Champions
Philadelphia Soul - 2008 AFL Champions
Oklahoma City Thunder - ????????
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 10-28-2005, 04:55 AM
jenn1189's Avatar
jenn1189 jenn1189 is offline
Senior Member
Destination any Forum
 
Join Date: 03 Aug 2002
Location: Hot as Hell in Florida
Age: 48
Gender: female
Posts: 4,060
Send a message via AIM to jenn1189 Send a message via MSN to jenn1189
Default

She eats the puppy pads. Shred's them like an Enron file. LOL. I like the idea of the treat when she goes outside...I sometimes do that but I usually forget to bring a treat with me when we go out. I think I'll start keeping some with her leash.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 10-28-2005, 05:03 AM
spunkywho's Avatar
spunkywho spunkywho is offline
Senior Member
This Post Feels Right
 
Join Date: 05 Sep 2003
Location: seattle
Age: 51
Gender: female
Posts: 13,849
Default

What Ryan said, except the puppy pads. I never got those to work. My puppies just liked to shred them instead.

4 months is really too young to 'get it', despite the fact that she would be physically able to hold it for a while.

First off, you need to get rid of her pee smell in your house. Dogs like to go where they went before. So, when you see her sniff, she is looking for one of her spots. When you clean it up, use an enzyme cleaner like 'Natures Miracle' (petco and petsmart have those) to get rid of the smell. Even though we humans cannot smell it, doesn't the smell is not still there. The puppy WILL smell it and use it as its bathroom again and again.

Then, start over and consider her not housebroken at all. Crate her when she cannot be completely supervised and/or only allow her roaming access in a limited area (kitchen for example - use baby gates to keep her confined). Keep an eye on her at all times. Reward her BIG time when she does go outside, so she associates puddle on the grass with reward, she will want to do it again. Piddling outside must be sooo much more fun and worth it for her than piddling inside!

Some people train their dogs to ring a bell when they need to go outside. Basically what you do is take its paw to ring the bell everytime you go out to piddle with her. She needs to associate the ringing of the bell with piddeling outside. I have not personally done that. My last dog would just sit in front of the door, waiting for someone to notice him - when he wasn't noticed, he'd piddle in front of it (which was good because it was wood - easy cleanup).
Here is a link about training a dog to use a bell: http://www.clickersolutions.com/arti...setraining.htm
Ringing a bell, though, means the puppy understands that it should be going outside vs. inside. As long as she finds opportunities to go inside, she won't really 'get it'.

When she does come back from outside and goes inside pretty much straight away, did you make sure she went outside? If she didn't go outside, don't take her back in until she did her business. Do not make potty break a fun thing in the sense that you allow her to play. It should be strictly business until she did her business - then its rewards and fun galore.

Finally, make sure she goes after meals, after naps and after a little play session. Those are the times they always have to go and won't want to hold it until later.

Raising a puppy can be tremendously frustrating (like when mine ate my ottoman and my custom made jaccuzzi cover), but so is raising a child and in retrospect it never seems that bad. Plus, for every frustration, you have a really fun memory.
__________________
Why won’t you say something now
Don’t leave me hanging
Cut me down
I miss the fire that was once in your eyes
Well come on and say something now
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 10-28-2005, 05:37 AM
RyanBounce04 RyanBounce04 is offline
Senior Member
Jovi Geek
 
Join Date: 29 Jul 2002
Location: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Age: 35
Gender: male
Posts: 6,818
Send a message via AIM to RyanBounce04 Send a message via MSN to RyanBounce04 Send a message via Yahoo to RyanBounce04
Default

Indeed... Crate training has been proven so effective. A little more detail into doing it. Make sure the crate is small enough to where she can't really lay down in one corner and go to the bathroom in the other. That won't teach her anything. I prefer the metal wire crates simply because they are more durable than the cheap plastic kind. A small crate can run between 35-65 dollars.

Ryan
__________________
Dallas Cowboys - 2007 NFC East Champions
Boston Red Sox - 2007 World Series Champions
Florida State Seminoles - 2000 National Champions
Tampa Bay Lightning - 2004 Stanley Cup Champions
Philadelphia Soul - 2008 AFL Champions
Oklahoma City Thunder - ????????
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 10-28-2005, 05:54 AM
spunkywho's Avatar
spunkywho spunkywho is offline
Senior Member
This Post Feels Right
 
Join Date: 05 Sep 2003
Location: seattle
Age: 51
Gender: female
Posts: 13,849
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RyanBounce04
I prefer the metal wire crates

I $@#@#$@ can't assemble them!!!
__________________
Why won’t you say something now
Don’t leave me hanging
Cut me down
I miss the fire that was once in your eyes
Well come on and say something now
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 10-28-2005, 09:46 AM
Iceman's Avatar
Iceman Iceman is offline
Senior Member
The Distance
 
Join Date: 11 Oct 2002
Location: Somewhere between heaven & hell.
Age: 44
Gender: male
Posts: 8,205
Send a message via ICQ to Iceman Send a message via MSN to Iceman
Default

4 months is not too young, our puppy learned to "hold it" at 4 months. Took him a week to realize how to do it.

The rewarding is very, very important. Let her know when she does the right thing. And if she does it inside, never punish her, act like nothing happened. And if you look at the puppy, you'll learn to see when she wants to go outside. Get her out as fast as you can and reward her well.

And the crate training is a cruel and unusual punishment.

Ice
__________________
D.Barry:"People who want to share their religious views with you almost never want you to share yours with them."
M.Brooks: "If presidents can't do it to their wives, they do it to their country."

Only dead fish go with the flow.
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 10-28-2005, 10:24 AM
UKjovi's Avatar
UKjovi UKjovi is offline
Cut myself on angel hair
Slippery When Wet
 
Join Date: 17 Jun 2003
Location: UK
Age: 53
Gender: male
Posts: 24,461
Send a message via MSN to UKjovi
Default

Just a quick tip , if you want to get rid of the pee smell use good old fashioned baking soda .Its far better than anything else plus its very cheap
__________________
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 10-28-2005, 12:13 PM
eriK's Avatar
eriK eriK is offline
Senior Member
Destination any Forum
 
Join Date: 28 Nov 2002
Location: Sweden
Posts: 4,295
Default

It ain't very nice of a dog to pee indoors!

And they are supposed to be our best friends.
__________________
Junkies & Whores

Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 10-28-2005, 01:54 PM
Mongoose's Avatar
Mongoose Mongoose is offline
PLAY KING OF THE MOUNTAIN...
I Don't Want To Post Forever
 
Join Date: 30 Jul 2002
Location: Sheffield
Age: 38
Gender: male
Posts: 13,330
Default

You make your dog sleep in a crate?


Harsh.


Try a dog basket instead?





Also, may I recommend a good sticking every time it pees on the floor? That'll sort it out.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +2. The time now is 04:42 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11.
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.