Thursday, 29 March 2012

4 Amazingly Effective Dog House Training Tips – Learn How to Stop Your Dog From Messing the Carpets!


Dog house training is one of the first things you need to do after purchasing a new pet. Some folks have major problems with training their dogs to eliminate outside mainly because they didn’t research the subject well enough and use the wrong methods. Remember that screaming at your dog or hitting him will never help you potty train him and can only result in more stinky spots on the carpet. These few dog house training tips outlined below will get your started on the right foot and, hopefully, save your pet a lot of stress and confusion.
  • Dog House Training Tip 1 – Feed your pet regularly.
This is one of the first things you need to implement – schedule regular meals. Depending on your dog’s age he will need either 3 (if he’s younger than 20 weeks) or 2 meals per day (if he’s above 20 weeks). Make sure to feed him on a specified time in the day and let him out within the first 20 minutes after the last meal. This way he will understand that there’s no need to eliminate indoors as he will have a chance to do it outside soon.
  • Dog House Training Tip 2 – Puppies need more patience.
Dogs that didn’t reach their 12 week will not be able to control their bladder and colon and so it’s your responsibility to monitor their behavior and look for such signs as circling or sniffing around as they directly precede elimination.
  • Dog House Training Tip 3 – Use one command when taking your dog outside.
Toilet training as any other form of dog training requires consistence. Make sure all of your family members use the same command (e.g. ‘outside’ or ‘go poop’) while taking your dog to the yard when he needs to relieve himself. This way it will quickly become associated in his ming with the act of elimination. In the future you will be able to trigger this process with the use of that one word.
  • Dog House Training Tip 4 – Don’t cry over spilled milk.
There is no point in rubbing your dog’s nose into the stools that he left on the carpet an hour ago. He won’t able to connect the fact of eliminating in the past with your present anger and will simply think that you don’t like feces, not the fact that he relieved themselves indoors. This can lead to coprophagia (act of eating poop) because your pet will want to get rid of stools by eating them so that you don’t get mad again.

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