February 11, 2008
House Training A Puppy - The Secrets to House Training A Puppy
When house training a dog, the education starts before you bring your puppy home. In this article, we’ll highlight six ways you can create a well-behaved dog and one who respects the home it lives in.
House Training Dogs
Make a game plan before you even think about bringing a puppy into your home. Here are some tips to consider:
- Dog proof your home. In other words, prevention is one of the keys to avoiding incidents. Hide loose electrical chords; don’t leave shoes lying around and close doors to rooms you don’t want your puppy to wander into.
- Choose the spot where the dog will sleep. This is up to you but stick with your original decision. By allowing the dog to sleep in your bedroom and then a month later deciding it’s not a good idea will only upset the animal who is likely to see it as some form of rejection.
- Make sure the dog has plenty of toys. Why? Because it’s going to want to chew on something through boredom and if your best pair of shoes are lying around then they will be easy pickings for a bored pup.
- Remove loose floor coverings from your home until the pup reaches a stage of maturity. Dogs have a penchant for not only chewing on rugs but soiling them. We’re not sure, it’s a dog thing so again, prevention is the best remedy here.
- Try using barriers such as baby gates to get a pup used to staying in one particular area.
- Consider dog obedience training. This is an important step in house training dogs but the obedience classes should really be started only when the pup starts to display sufficient maturity.
Also don’t get the dog too reliant on spending most of it’s time inside. When house training a dog, some yard time is vital as well as walking time. It all makes for a happier relationship all round when the pup has enough variety in it’s life to keep it from wandering off the beaten path.
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