Puppy crate training is one of the most effective ways to housebreak your new puppy.Puppy crate training takes a little patience, but it's a good way to set your puppy on the right path. This method has an impressive track record.Be sure to prepare everything ahead of time. Even before you bring your new puppy home, have the puppy crate ready and waiting.
The size of the crate is important.
For proper puppy crate training, you should have plenty of room in the crate for the puppy to turn around, stand and lie down, but don't get one that's too big.
Puppies feel uncomfortable in a crate that's so big they rattle around in it. If your puppy is a breed that will grow large, it's okay to buy a bigger crate for him to grow into, but make sure it has an adjustable partition in the back. This lets you keep his living space comfortable and cozy, but you can still expand it by moving the partition back as your puppy grows to full size. When you are ready to begin puppy crate training, place your new puppy gently in his crate. Make sure you've also put a towel or small blanket and a treat or toy in the crate.
If you're using a wire crate for puppy crate training, always remove the puppy's collar first so it won't get snagged on the wire.You may hear some whining or even crying at this point. You need to ignore it.
Sometimes it helps to cover the crate with a blanket so his home feels a little cozier.
Remember, dogs are not claustrophobic. They like an enclosed space.
It's their den. After your puppy has remained in the crate for about twenty minutes, remove him from the crate and take him outside.
As soon as he goes potty, praise him, pet him and make him feel loved and close. The next step in the puppy crate training process is to bring your puppy back inside and play together for twenty to thirty minutes.
Then it's time to put your puppy back in the crate.
You'll be able to gradually increase the crate time to two hours.Puppies will not usually go potty in their crates.
If your puppy has an accident, never scold.
They really don't understand the idea that going potty is bad, so scolding doesn't help. It only confuses them.For best results with puppy crate training, you'll need to have a schedule.
And when you take your puppy outside, always make sure you take him to the same spot each time.
Especially at first, every time you remove him from his crate, you'll want to take him outside. This builds a clear association in his mind. As your puppy begins to get the hang of puppy crate training you'll be able to leave him in the crate for longer periods.
Eventually he'll feel so at home in the crate that you'll be able to leave the crate door open overnight and for short periods during the day.Successful puppy crate training has two simple requirements: patience and a regular schedule. With those two things, your new puppy will soon be a happy, well-adjusted member of the family..
Raising Puppies: Be Positive
Bringing home the puppy home is one of the most enjoyable things that you can enjoy with the young puppy. After that, you are now thrusts into the role of a mother hen or an alpha male type of owner to raise the dog properly.
You would have to be very patient when raising a puppy. This will take a very long time and will sometimes be depressing. It will be depressing when you keep repeating things to the point that your dog does not seem to be responding.
You would then be left wondering if this dog is deaf or is purposely doing this to piss me off.
Despite of all the challenges of training a puppy, you should always remember that in the end it will be for both your benefit. If you leave your puppy untrained, it will think that it's the alpha male in your household and may make you do things you purposely hate.
Just think about the situation when it is the dog that's becoming the boss. The dog will be pulling you out of the house just...
Puppy Basics: Potty-Training, Reprimanding, and Rewards...
Potty Training Your Puppy:Make sure you feed your dog at regular times every day as this makes bathroom breaks regular as well. Feed your puppy 2-3 times a day. As soon as he is finished eating, take him to a grassy "potty area". Speak the words "go potty" or "go in the grass" before and while he is eliminating. Be sure to praise him when he is done.
What you are doing is building word associations with the dog that will allow you to encourage his potty activity on command. This comes in handy when you and your dog are at unusual locations and at pit stops during long haul travel. It also saves you from cleaning unwanted fecal material off the carpet at home.It is a good idea to train your puppy to use a place where you can easily clean up and dispose of the droppings into the sewer. This is because worms that infect dogs and make them sick get spread around through the eggs or larvae found in the feces. Some, like the roundworm, can also infect children.Reprimanding Your Puppy:Talk...
Puppy Basics: Potty-Training, Reprimanding, and Rewards...
Train Your Dog With Respect
Proper training of your dog should begin when he is a puppy.
The first four months of a dog's life are very important in the training of your dog.
This is when they learn behaviors that they will practice in the future.Socializing your dog is one of the most important things you can do to influence your dog's future behavior.
As soon as you bring your new puppy home, you should start letting him interact with other puppies, dogs and humans.
Take your dog to parks where there will be other pets and people.
Ask your friends if it is okay for your dog to visit their dog at their home or yours.
Puppies will learn how to get along with other puppies and dogs if they are allowed to play with them when they are young.
Introduce your dog to new experiences.
Give him rides in the car, walk him on a leash around the park, let him hear the vacuum cleaner running.
Help your puppy get used to a regular routine of baths,...
Dachshund Puppies
Dachshunds make loving, lively, active and intelligent pets. Their short legs and muscular long bodies give them a distinctive appearance, and rare is the person who can walk past one without instinctively smiling at its quaint look. Independent and stubborn, Dachshunds need firm handling from a very young age, but are otherwise easy to look after.
Puppies are available for sale from dog breeders, or can be adopted from rescues. It is a good idea to thoroughly research the breed before you bring a pup home. Though highly adaptable, Dachshunds have some peculiar characteristics that might not make them suitable pets for all homes.
They are hunters by nature and might not get along with other pets. Unless socialized they do not take very well to young children either. Dachshunds also like to bark, which can be a problem in apartment buildings or with close-by neighbors. You will also need tremendous patience to train a Dachshund puppy, since it can be a trifle stubborn...
Dachshund Puppies
Dog Training Tips that Work!
In dog training, the most simple acts often produce the best results. In any dog pack, the alpha sets the rules and the rest follow. Therefore, by establishing yourself as the alpha, you can be sure that your obedience training sessions will be that much more productive. The following is a list of 8 simple things you can do to teach your new puppy or unruly dog that you are the alpha in your pack.
1. Never feed your dog from your plate while you're eating.
A dog must learn that your are the alpha and that it can only eat when you are finished with your meal.
2. Never allow your dog on the sofa or on your bed. And if your dog sits on your path, gently shove it out of the way with your foot. By setting boundaries, you will instill in your dog that it must obey the alpha.
3. Never allow your dog to chew on your towels, socks, shoes, or clothing.
Use bitter apple to discourage these behaviors.
4. NEVER HIT YOUR DOG...
Buying a New Puppy? How to Avoid the Pitfalls
Many books and articles have been written regarding the art of choosing a puppy (i.e. performing puppy tests, looking for parental OFA certifications, and so on...), but few, if any, discuss the contractual end of purchasing a puppy. I can tell you through personal experience that purchasing a quality show puppy from a famous breeder can be quite a stressful experience because no breeder would give up the pick of the litter to a competitor (for obvious reasons) or to a novice without co-ownership of the puppy. Co-ownership of a puppy entitles the breeder to many rights to the detriment of the buyer. To begin with, the breeder might also be an experienced handler and might contractually require the purchaser to use the breeder as the puppies' trainer and handler.
Agreeing to this could be a monumental mistake because the purchaser might be required to pay (even though they might be co-owners) for the breeders time to train and handle the puppy. Agreeing to this can COST you THOUSANDS...
Buying a New Puppy? How to Avoid the Pitfalls
House Training A Dog - The Simple Way
The puppy is new and oh so cute.
You cuddle with it every day and love to chase it around the yard or play tug of war with the stuffed animal that, in a year will probably be missing most of its limbs.
However, all is not fun and games in the house with the new puppy.
Now comes the hard part, house training the dog.
As the new puppy does one of two things to relieve him/herself in the middle of your new white carpet you find yourself wondering why it is so difficult for the dog to understand that you do not go in the house.
You think to yourself why would anyone, animals included, go to the bathroom where they live? Would they not want it as far away as possible?
You think your puppy must just be thickheaded, anyone with a dog has looked at their animal at this stage and said "you stupid dog".
However, then you remember that for a couple years after you were born you not only went to the bathroom where you live...