House training your puppy can be a very easy thing to do
if you take advantage of her natural tendencies. If you
ignore them, the process can be extremely difficult, if
not downright impossible. Probably one of the most difficult
concepts for many people to grasp is that a puppy is not
a furry four legged person. She is a dog. She is as different
from us as if she were a grizzly bear or a Siberian tiger.
Our dogs are direct descendants of the timber wolf. For
practical purposes, they are still timber wolves, only in
slightly altered clothing.
Twenty thousand years ago there were no dogs on the face
of the earth. The way that dogs came into being was that
our cave dwelling ancestors would find where a mother wolf
had a litter of cubs, steal one of the cubs and take it
back to their cave where they raised it as a pet. Over time,
the cave dwellers noticed that the pet wolves exhibited
behaviors that were valuable to people. For instance, when
strangers approached the cave, the wolf noticed and gave
warning long before the people would have otherwise known.
Likewise, the wolves would alert hunters to the presence
of game long before it was actually spotted. Some wolves
had a tendency to swing around game and drive it back toward
the hunting party. This, incidentally, was the start of
the herding instinct of the collie type dogs. Gradually,
man discovered that by breeding together wolves that showed
a strong tendency to do a particular thing that the behavior
would be inherited by the offspring. Thus, we had the start
of selective breeding and one of the beginnings of agriculture.
As our ancestors bred to strengthen certain traits and
weaken others, the wolf was slowly changed into a dog. Today,
our dogs come in many shapes and sizes. We have strengthened
natural wolf drives into specific dog vocations. But, every
gene that gives us a particular breed of dog is one that
originally occurred in the wolf. We have added nothing.
Our dogs are still wolves. When we accept that fact, house
training becomes easy.
Wolves and, by extension, dogs are den dwelling animals.
They are clean animals that given a choice will not soil
where they live. This simple fact, coupled with the use
of a crate makes house training easy. Every dog should have
a place of her own. It should be a place where she can rest,
find sanctuary. Her den, if you prefer. A crate can be that
place. Crates are a marvelous invention. They make raising
a puppy so easy that I would not even consider attempting
to do so without one. Safely tucked away in a crate your
puppy will not be able to eat your home and possessions
while you are away. When your nerves are become frayed at
her ceaseless bounding you can give her time out while you
catch your breath. And, safely confined, she will resist
the urge to go to the bathroom as long as she can.
What you are doing when you house train a puppy is to develop
in her the habit of having grass under her bottom when she
goes. The only way to do this is to have her on grass every
time she does. So, how do we manage to do this. Well, for
one thing, we let the pup sleep at night in her crate. The
first thing she needs to do when she awakes is to go to
the bathroom. When she wakes up is not necessarily when
you wake up. If she's free to roam around, she'll travel
what she considers a proper distance from her bed and do
her business. If she is confined to a crate she'll hold
on as long as she can. Now, if you leave her in the crate
so long that her choices are explode or go, she will always
opt to not explode. But, within reason, in a crate, she'll
hold on and this gives you a chance to get up and take her
outside.
Once outside, the pup will probably very quickly urinate.
Most will also defecate. There are a high percentage of
pups, though, that will start to chase butterflies or sniff
where mice have run through the grass. In short, they play
and will actually forget what they are outside for. When
you bring them back in the house, they suddenly remember
and you have a cleanup job to do. When I have a pup who
wants to play, I take her out on a leash. I stand in one
spot until boredom causes her to do her business. Then I
take the leash off and let her play. This becomes her reward
for going outside and within a few days it greatly speeds
up the process. I don't like to spend a lot of time standing
around waiting for the pup to clean out. If within about
five minutes she hasn't gone, I take her back in and put
her back in her crate. Fifteen or so minutes later, I take
her back out for another opportunity. In time, she will
go. Then and only then do I let her loose in my house.
Also, be aware that there are certain pups that will need
to go more than once. Only observation will tell you if
yours is one of these. If she is, stay with her until she
has finished before you take her in. When I take the pup
back in, I feed her breakfast. Within a given amount of
time after eating, she is going to need to go to the bathroom
again. This time varies from puppy to puppy, but with each
puppy it is so fixed that you can almost set your watch
by it. Have her on grass again when this time comes.
There are certain other predictable times when a puppy
is going to need to relieve herself. Any time she wakes
from a nap, after she has eaten or drunk water, whenever
she has had a play session, at night before going to bed
and then, depending on the puppy, about every two to four
hours in between. Your job is to have her on grass when
these times occur.
After several days of being taken to the grass and being
praised and rewarding for using it, your puppy will get
the idea that grass is a wonderful place to relieve herself.
And you will have completed exactly half of your task. The
other half is to teach her that it is wrong to go in the
house. This requires the use of punishment and it also requires
that you watch your puppy every moment that she is loose
in your house.
Punishment is a wonderful teaching tool. You can stop any
behavior you choose by the use of punishment. But punishment
is not a broad club. Punishment is more a surgeon's scalpel
and if it is going to affect a behavior it must be applied
with a surgeon's skill. What few people understand about
punishment is that it only affects a behavior while that
behavior is happening. After the fact is too late. This
applies to dogs. It applies to children. It applies to you
and me. YOU CAN ONLY CHANGE A BEHAVIOR WITH PUNISHMENT WHILE
THE BEHAVIOR IS HAPPENING. After the fact, it is not punishment,
it is not teaching, it is not behavior modification. It
is abuse, pure and simple. And there is too much of that
in our world.
So, how do we punish? When your puppy is loose in your
house, you must have two eyes on her. You can't fold clothes,
you can't wash dishes, you can't kiss your spouse. Your
job is to watch the puppy. If you can't, she should be in
her crate. When she squats, apply the punishment, scoop
her up and get her outside. When she goes outside praise
and reward her for doing so even though you had to take
her outside.
I punish my puppies for squatting in the house by throwing
a bean bag at them. Bean bags are easy to make. Pour some
beans into the toe of a sock and tie a knot in it. When
I'm housebreaking a puppy, I make quite a few bean bags.
I want to be able to reach out and grab one wherever I might
be in my house. And when I throw the bean bag, it is to
hit the puppy, not to scare her. There is enough give in
the bean bag that I don't fear breaking the pup. And, punishment
that is not uncomfortable is not punishment.
Should you find a pile or a puddle that you did not see
the puppy deposit, simply clean it up. Taking her back to
it, showing it to her and punishing her will not facilitate
housebreaking. What it will do, in many cases, is cause
your puppy to start destroying the evidence. I leave it
to your imagination as to how she will do this.
Given time, most dogs will start telling you when they
need to go out. Seldom is this the classical barking at
the door. My old Lab, Widgeon, lies by the door. Trim, the
Border Collie, just gets a desperate look on his face. Bess,
one of my Fox Terriers, just becomes a pest. If you are
observant, your dog will teach you what her signal is.
I'm often asked, "How long should I use the crate?" My
answer is, forever. As I write this, the dogs are in with
me. Trim is sleeping under my desk, but Widgeon and the
two Fox Terriers are curled up in a crate. The door is open.
They don't have to be there, but it is where they chose,
because it is their place.
Beyond that, I would answer that you should use the crate
on a regular basis until your puppy has gone ninety consecutive
days without even once squatting in your house. Then you
are probably safe trusting her out for less attentive periods.
House training a puppy can be and is attention intensive.
But it's really not all that time consuming. It's just a
matter of doing things in a consistent pattern until your
goal is reached. As my grandfather, Lewis Epps, used to
say, "Training a puppy takes as much effort as training
a child. The major difference is that when you get the pup
the puppy is trained you can enjoy her. When you finally
get the kids trained, they marry somebody and leave home.
You never get to enjoy them."
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