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#1 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 65
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My husband and I put a deposit down for a basset puppy last weekend after a brief search about the breed. Now that I have a date for him coming home, I am petrified! Our last dog was a beagle, difficult to train, but by the time he died, he was very well behaved and only peed in the house after I cleaned the carpet. Guess he had to make sure it was marked as his. Anyway, we will be bringing Nitro home Aug. 9. I am hoping for suggestions to make the house training as pain-free as possible. I am a stay-home-mom-full-time-online-student, so the puppy will rarely be home alone. Should I have the carpets cleaned again before we bring Nitro home to make sure the beagle smell is gone? Will that help?
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#2 (permalink) | |||
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Senior Member
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Quote:
How to Remove Urine Stains and Odors from Carpet Quote:
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for more complete details on housetraining see [url=http://www.clickersolutions.com/articles/2001/housetrain.htm] quote]Do not rely on a puppy to tell you when it's time to go out. That is expecting too much responsibility and communication at too early an age. It is up to you, the adult human, to know when he needs to go out. Watch his activity level and the clock. A 12 wk puppy who is busy playing may need to urinate every 15-20 minutes, whereas a resting puppy might go for an hour, and a sleeping puppy can go 8 hours at night. Activity makes urine! Activity makes urine! Repeat this 10 times, slowly. This is a very important lesson for new puppy owners. [/quote] Another common problem area is relying on the dog to come up with a signal to tell you when it needs to go out. It actual does not happen that often. It is better to teach a cue for the dog to use that you will not ignore. One of the easiest is Ringing a Bell |
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#3 (permalink) | ||||
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Senior Member
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While housetraining is the area most new puppy owners focus on it is actual one of lessor inportant aspects of training that occurs during the first few months of a puppies life. Even if you screw it up you have plenty of time to correct it. There are some more critical aspects of puppy development that you only get one shot at.
1. Socialization and Hibituation, Nothing is more important in ending up with a well adjusted easy to live with dog. Countdown to a Crackerjack Canine Companion Quote:
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WHAT NOBODY TOLD YOU ABOUT RAISING A PUPPY AVSAB Position Statement On Puppy Socialization Quote:
Bite Inhibition - How to Teach It 3. Fustration tolerance of being left alone. Basset being more social than other breeds tend to suffer disporportionately from Seperation Anxiety. This can be minized if efforts are taken early on to expose the dog to small periods where it is alone. Separation Anxiety Quote:
It Takes a Pack to Raise a Puppy |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: new mexico
Posts: 1,196
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Thanks - as always - for the info, Mikey! I don't know how you keep all the wonderful articles/knowledge you have in such an organized manner that you can find it and share it. But I'm sure thankful you do!
I have 2 3 month old pups that I'm sure were taken from the litter too soon and then spent a while in homes that didn't give a damn. These articles are great!
__________________
Chris Foodslave, chauffer & doorperson to Elvis, Georgia, Ginger & Maggie, Crissy & Dart |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Washington DC
Posts: 116
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I don't have much experience or advice since we have only had our basset for 3 months and she is our first, but I thought I would chip in that she was really easy to housetrain. My husband is home with her all day and after about 3-4 weeks of grabbing her and taking her outside in the middle of a piddle she has learn to go to the back door and either give us her "I need to tinkle" look or if we aren't watching she will bark. She is only 5 months old and its been at least 3 weeks since she had an accident.
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#6 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 65
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Mikey T, thank you for your wonderful reply! You are such a wealth of knowledge, I am so glad I joined this forum. You have given my some excellent advice, and I have my son reading the articles you posted with me so that when our "baby" comes home in three weeks, we will be ready for him! Keep the info coming!
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#7 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: southcentral Pa.
Posts: 2,235
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One thing I might add about nighttime:
I've always kept my pups in a small crate with comfy bedding near my side of the bed. The puppy won't want to soil his bedding, so when he has to pee, he'll start fussing. When that happens, I get up, carry the puppy on a leash outside to his potty place, tell him to "tinkle" or whatever word you're using, praise when he does, then carry him back to his bed. Sometimes I have to do this a couple of times per night with a young puppy. By doing this, the puppy is learning that when he fusses you will take him out. This has helped alot in housebreaking my pups over the years. (When the pup gets older, I use bell training, as mentioned above. It's pretty easy to train them to do this, and when we travel we take the bell along to hang on hotel doorknobs.) |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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