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#1
I am new to this forum (or any forum). I have a new german shephard/pitt bull mix puppy - about 9 weeks old now. I would love to hear comments from any other owners of gs/pb dogs or puppy owners with training advice, etc. This will be our first puppy experience. We do have another dog but he was about 2 years when we took him in as a stray. We've now had him about 15 years!
 
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#2
Hi SadiesMom, welcome! Your puppy is adorable! Wow...your other dog is 17 yrs old? We hope our dogs can live that long. We took in two stray dogs too. Love to see pics of your dogs.
 
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#5
Thanks for the welcome! We don't really know much about puppies, so we have been reading everything we can get our hands on. Sadie seems really smart & has learned all sorts of things like sit, stay, lay down, come, stop, speak...but she is still working on housetraining. The first thing she does as soon as you let her out is relieve herself, so that part is good, but she doesn't hesitate to go inside anytime, anywhere. All the books say no punishment for going in the house, so we haven't. But how do you get her to understand that only going outside is acceptable?
 

PennyRose

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#7
Here is some great info!




House Break a Puppy


Potty training a puppy can be very frustrating. It helps to remember that your puppy is a lot like a human toddler, if it's quiet - worry. Puppies don't know what you expect from them until you properly train them. While potty training your puppy try to keep your temper in check; use patience when dealing with your puppy as its just a baby.

1. Crate Training - Use a crate while potty training your puppy. Your puppy should be in the crate while you are at work, sleeping, or anytime you are not able to watch it. Dogs are den animals so being in a crate is natural for them. Puppies will cry and want to be released at first, but be patient; it will get used to being in the crate and come to enjoy it. Make the crate a happy place, not a punishment. Teach your puppy a command when going in the crate, for example, kennel or go to your room; this will make it easier then trying to force or push the dog into the crate later. Also, dogs are pack animals so it's helpful if you keep the crate in the bedroom where the rest of the "pack" is sleeping. This is a tough one in the beginning because the puppy will cry and you will be tempted to let it out. Tough love, if the puppy is loose in the house then it will have the opportunity to go anywhere it pleases. Keep the puppy crated at night until it can be trusted in the house. You may have to let the pup outside during the night and during your lunch break during the day. Be prepared to lose some sleep.

2. Take the puppy to the same area of the yard - Each time your puppy goes outside go with it. Take the puppy on a lead so you can be sure it goes to the same area of the yard each time. This way the puppy can smell itself and know what it's supposed to do. Only give your puppy about 10 minutes to potty, if it doesn't go, then bring it in and put it back in the crate, wait 15 - 30 minutes and take it back outside. Don't let the puppy play until it potties. Playing is a reward, don't reward bad behavior. Puppies are just little kids, they go outside, get excited, and forget why they went outside in the first place. It helps to give a command to potty, that way it learns a little faster what is expected, and later in life, if you’re running late, you can give the potty command and your dog will potty and be done with it.


3. Praise for going potty outside - When the puppy potties outside - give a special treat, play with a favorite toy, say "good boy"; whatever, just make sure that the puppy thinks, "Wow! Going potty outside is loads of fun, I'm going to do this again!"


4. Tether to you while inside - When you are at home, and the puppy is not in the crate, consider using a long lead to tether the puppy to you. If the puppy is loose in the house it can gain the opportunity to sneak off and use the bathroom. The idea in house training is to avoid accidents, the tether works for that purpose.

5. Take the puppy outside immediately - Following meals, drinking, playtime or excitement, when you first get home from work, and first thing in the morning. If the puppy gets excited it may have an accident, avoid the trouble by taking the puppy outside.


6. Take the puppy outside often - Try to take the puppy outside every hour. If your home, why not take the puppy outside for frequent potty breaks; it'll learn that much quicker and you'll avoid accidents, it probably has to "go" anyway.


7. Keep a potty journal - Keep track of how quickly food moves through the puppy. This will help you gage how quickly to get the little puppy out the door following meals. Mark all the pups accidents with the times of the day/night they happen using a red pen. Mark all the times the pup went outdoors successfully when you took him out using a blue pen. Keeps the journal going for at least one week. After one week, you can go back and find all the accidents. They will show a pattern and you can then see when you need to take the pup outdoor more often.


8. Teach the puppy to let you know when it wants to go outside - Teach the puppy to bark, ring a bell, or scratch the door before going outside. This will help you know when he has to "go". The goal is for the puppy to get to a point where it will alert you as to when it's time for a potty break.

9. Invest in a good odor neutralizer - Mistakes are going to happen so plan for it. If you see your puppy make the mistake act quickly, say AHAHAH clap your hands together to make a noise or use a penny can to startle the puppy, and run it outside to the potty place. If you didn't see the mistake happen, bite your lip, and clean the mistake. Use an odor neutralizer like Nature's Miracle or Simple Solution - these products neutralize odor instead of covering it up. You don't want the puppy going back to the same spot on your carpet.
 
G

Gatep

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#8
hi and welcome to Chaz. wow it's really a great info. thanks for sharing. i might use it someday too.
 
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#9
Thanks for the info. I've been reading lots of stuff on potty training, but this was the best & most comprehensive so far. I will be trying ALL of it.
 

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