Puppy - Getting Started And
House Training Guide
When you bring a new puppy into your home there will be
a period of adjustment. Your goals are to help your puppy to quickly bond to its
new family, and to minimize the stress associated with leaving its mother,
littermates, and former home. If there are already dogs in the new home the
transition may be a little easier as the puppy is able to identify with its own
kind. Obtaining two puppies would be another option. However, most puppies,
especially those obtained before 12 weeks of age, will form attachments almost
immediately to the people and any other pets in the new home, provided that
there are no unpleasant consequences associated with each new person and
experience.
How do I prevent my puppy from doing damage or getting
into mischief?
The rule of thumb for dog training is "set the dog
up for success". Supervise the puppy at all times until it has learned what
it is allowed to chew, and where it is supposed to eliminate. Keeping the puppy
on a 10 foot remote leash is an excellent way to keep it in sight, and to train
it not to wander off. This is particularly helpful with a highly investigative
puppy or for a very busy household.
At any time that the puppy cannot be supervised, such
as throughout the night or when you need to go out, house it in a secure area.
An escape-proof crate, a dog run, or collapsible pen are simple, highly
effective, and most important, safe. The puppy could also be confined to a room
that has been carefully dog-proofed. When selecting your dog’s confinement
area it is useful to consider a number of factors. The dog will adapt fastest to
the new area if it is associated with rewards. Have the puppy enter the area for
all its treats, toys, and perhaps food and water. The area should have some
warm, dry, comfortable bedding, and should never be used for punishment
(although it can, and should, be used to prevent problems). Housing the puppy in
isolated areas where there is minimal human contact, such as in a laundry room
or basement, should be avoided. In fact, often the best area is a kitchen (so
that this can also be the dog’s feeding area) or a bedroom (so that it becomes
the dog’s sleeping area). Each time the puppy needs to be confined, it should
first be well exercised and given an opportunity to eliminate. Another
consideration in selecting the type of confinement area is how long you may need
to leave the dog alone. Anytime the puppy will be left alone for longer than it
can control its elimination, you must provide an area for elimination. A room or
collapsible pen with a paper-covered area would be needed. A cage or crate could
be used for owners that do not have to leave their puppies confined for longer
than 2 or 3 hours.
What is the best way to punish my puppy for
misbehavior?
Every effort should be made to avoid punishment for new
puppies as it is generally unnecessary and can lead to avoidance of family
members, at a time when bonding and attachment is critical. By preventing
problems through confinement or supervision, providing for all of the puppy’s
needs, and setting up the environment for success, little or no punishment
should ever be required. If a reprimand is needed, a verbal "no" or a
loud noise is usually sufficient to distract a puppy so that you can then
redirect the puppy to the correct behavior.
How can I prevent problems?
Supervise the puppy at all times that it is not
confined to ensure that the puppy does not get itself into mischief, or cause
damage to itself or the home. Leaving a remote leash attached is all that is
usually needed to prevent or interrupt inappropriate behavior such as garbage
raiding, chewing on household items, house-soiling, or wandering off into rooms
or areas that are out of bounds. If the leash is attached to a head halter you
can quickly correct other problems that might arise, such as nipping, play
biting, and jumping up. When the puppy cannot be supervised, confinement
(discussed above) will be necessary.
What must I do to provide for my puppy’s needs?
Chewing, play, exercise, exploration, feeding, social
contact and elimination are basic requirements of all puppies. By providing
appropriate outlets for each of these needs, few problems are likely to emerge.
Puppies should be given chew toys that interest them and occupy their time. When
supervised, the owner can allow the puppy to investigate and explore its new
environment and can direct the puppy to the appropriate chew toys (and away from
inappropriate areas). Play, exercise, affection, training, and handling must all
be part of the daily routine. New tasks, new routines, new people and new forms
of handling can be associated with rewards to ensure success. And, of course,
the puppy will need to be provided with an acceptable area for elimination, and
will need guidance until it learns to use this area.
How do I house-train my puppy?
All it requires are a few basic rules to house-train
puppies within a few days. This does not mean that the puppy will be able to be
trusted to wander throughout the home without eliminating. What the puppy should
quickly learn is where it should eliminate, and the consequences of eliminating
indoors when the owner is supervising.
A.
Puppies have a
strong urge to eliminate after sleeping, playing, feeding and drinking.
Prepare to take your puppy to its selected elimination area within 30 minutes
of each of these activities. In addition, although some puppies can control
themselves through the entire night, most puppies need to eliminate every 3 to
4 hours during the daytime. With each passing month, you can expect your puppy
to control itself a little longer between elimination times. The puppy should
be taken to its elimination area, given a word or two of verbal encouragement
(e.g. "Hurry up") and as soon as elimination is completed, lavishly
praised and patted. A few tasty food treats can also be given the first few
times the puppy eliminates in the right spot, and then intermittently
thereafter. This teaches the puppy the proper place to eliminate, and that
elimination in that location is associated with rewards. Some puppies may
learn to eliminate when they hear the cue words ("Hurry up"). Always
go outdoors with your puppy to ensure that it has eliminated and so that
rewards can be given immediately upon completion, and not when the dog comes
back indoors (too late!).
B. When indoors the
puppy must be supervised so that you can see when it needs to eliminate and
immediately take it outdoors to its elimination area. Should pre-elimination
signs (circling, squatting, sneaking-off, heading to the door) occur,
immediately take the dog to its elimination site, give the cue words, and reward
the puppy for elimination. If the puppy begins to eliminate indoors, use a
verbal reprimand or shake can, and immediately take the puppy outdoors to its
proper site, so that it can complete the act. Rather than using punishment, it
is best to always supervise your puppy. One of the best techniques is to leave a
remote lead attached.
C. When you are not
available to supervise, the puppy should be confined to its confinement area. Be
certain that your puppy has had a chance to eliminate, and has had sufficient
play and exercise before any lengthy confinement. If the area is small enough,
such as a pen or crate, many puppies will have sufficient control to keep this
area clean. This means that when you come to release the puppy from confinement,
it must be taken directly to its elimination area. If the area is too large for
the puppy to keep clean, or the puppy is left alone too long for it to control
itself, the entire area, except for the puppies bed and feeding spot, should be
covered with paper for elimination. Once the puppy starts to limit its
elimination to some selected areas, unused areas of the paper can be taken up.
For owners that intend to continue to use paper for training, even when home,
the puppy should be supervised when released from confinement, and then returned
to this area when pre-elimination signs are seen.
Why does my puppy refuse to eliminate in my presence,
even when outdoors?
Puppies that are not supervised and rewarded for
outdoor elimination, but are constantly being disciplined and punished for
indoor elimination, may soon begin to fear to eliminate in all locations in your
presence. These puppies do not associate the punishment with indoor elimination;
they associate the punishment with the presence of the owners.
What do I do if I find some stool or urine in an
inappropriate spot?
There is no point in punishing or even pointing out the
problem to the puppy. Only if the puppy is in the act of elimination will it
understand the consequences (rewards or punishment). In fact, it is not the
puppy who has erred, it is the owner who has erred by not properly supervising.
How can I teach my puppy to signal that it needs to go
out to eliminate?
By regularly taking the dog outdoors, through the same
door, to the same site, and providing rewards for proper elimination, the puppy
should soon learn to head for the door each time it has to eliminate. If you
recognize the signs of impending elimination and praise the puppy whenever it
heads for the doorway, the behavior can be further encouraged. Puppies that have
been interrupted or reprimanded on one or more occasions as they begin to
eliminate indoors, may begin to try to sneak away, whine or show some form of
anxiety, when they feel the urge to eliminate, but cannot escape from the owner’s
sight. If you can pick up on these cues, and take the puppy directly to the
outdoors for elimination and reward, the puppy may consistently begin to show
these signals when he or she needs to eliminate, and may even begin to take you
to the exit door..
When will I be able to trust my puppy to wander loose
throughout the home?
Generally you will want your dog to have been error
free around the house for about a month before you can begin to decrease your
confinement and supervision. The first time you leave the puppy unsupervised
should be just after taking the dog outdoors for elimination. Gradually increase
the length of time that your dog is allowed to roam through the home without
supervision. If the dog has been able to go unsupervised for a couple of hours
without an "accident", it might then be possible to begin going out
for short periods of time. Of course, if the dog still investigates and chews,
then confinement and supervision may still be necessary.