Dog Training & Care : Solutions to Stop Puppies From Biting

One solution to keep a puppy from biting is to grab onto her muzzle to keep her mouth shut, showing that the owner is dominant and intolerable of such behavior. Learn about praising a puppy when it doesn’t bite withhelp from a certified professional dog trainer in this free video on puppy training. Expert: Zephyr Clarke-Dolberg Contact: www.miami-dog-training.com Bio: Zephyr Clarke-Dolberg is a certified professional dog trainer in Miami, Fla. Filmmaker: Paul Muller

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Dog & Puppy Care : Caring For Newborn Puppies

Care for newborn puppies by making sure the mother dog cleans them, making sure the puppies are nursing and making sure the mother is stimulating them to go to the bathroom. Contact a veterinarian to discuss care for a pregnant dog and newborn puppies with advice from aprofessional dog trainer in this free video on puppies. Expert: Heidi Dixner Contact: www.redrovercomeover.com Bio: Heidi Dixner has been training dogs professionally since 2001 and a member of the Association of Pet Dog Trainers since 2003. Filmmaker: Dimitri LaBarge

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Dog & Puppy Care : How Do You Get Rid of Fleas on Pups?

Get rid of fleas on puppies by working with a veterinarian, avoiding the use of harmful chemicals and giving frequent baths with a gentle shampoo. Avoid allowing a puppy to get fleas in the first place with tips from aprofessional dog trainer in this free video on puppy flea control. Expert: Heidi Dixner Contact: www.redrovercomeover.com Bio: Heidi Dixner has been training dogs professionally since 2001 and a member of the Association of Pet Dog Trainers since 2003. Filmmaker: Dimitri LaBarge

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Dog & Puppy Care : When Can I Bathe My Puppy?

Wait until a puppy is old enough to be adopted before bathing it. Use diluted shampoo and keep the water temperature lukewarm when bathing a dog. Learn more about avoiding over-bathing a puppy with information from aprofessional dog trainer in this free video on puppies. Expert: Heidi Dixner Contact: www.redrovercomeover.com Bio: Heidi Dixner has been training dogs professionally since 2001 and a member of the Association of Pet Dog Trainers since 2003. Filmmaker: Dimitri LaBarge

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Dog & Puppy Care : What Is Crate Training?

Crate training works with a dog’s natural instinct to be in a confined area. Choose a crate that is big enough for a dog to move around and lay down. Learn more about how long to keep a dog in a crate with information from aprofessional dog trainer in this free video on dog care. Expert: Heidi Dixner Contact: www.redrovercomeover.com Bio: Heidi Dixner has been training dogs professionally since 2001 and a member of the Association of Pet Dog Trainers since 2003. Filmmaker: Dimitri LaBarge

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Dog & Puppy Care : How to Potty Train a Puppy

To potty train a puppy, avoid stressing out about accidents, try crate training, and take the dog to the same spot in the yard every time. Be consistent and fair when potty training a puppy using advice from aprofessional dog trainer in this free video on puppies. Expert: Heidi Dixner Contact: www.redrovercomeover.com Bio: Heidi Dixner has been training dogs professionally since 2001 and a member of the Association of Pet Dog Trainers since 2003. Filmmaker: Dimitri LaBarge

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Basic Puppy Care : Puppy Potty Training

Potty training your new puppy or dog takes patience and commitment, and is often made easier with consistent crate training. Learn more about how to potty train puppies with tips from a veterinarian in this free puppy care video. Expert: Gregory McDonald Contact: www.petpointers.com Bio: Dr. Gregory McDonald earned his Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree from Ohio State University in 1979. Filmmaker: Diana Bacon

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House Training Your New Puppy

mypuppycare101.com House training your puppy is easier if you know these few tips More tips can be found at

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Mutt Matters: A Guide to Canine Problem Solving

31266913 Mutt Matters: A Guide to Canine Problem Solving

Mutt Matters is a book with insight and experience from someone who has trained dogs and helped others do so over the last twelve-plus years. All the common problems such as crate training or house breaking, barking, chewing, etc., are covered in the book. Also discussed is an area that many books or trainers do not like to handle, and that is aggression. Having specialized in law enforcement canine training for the last eight years, Aaron Ziegler is more than familiar with how canine aggression comes to surface and how and where it lies within the dogas natural instincts. As a trainer, he uses these natural instincts to mold dogs into partners law enforcement canine handlers can trust. By molding the dogsa prey, defense and fight drives, the dogs learn to apprehend criminals. These same drives are in all dogs, and sometimes the unsuspecting owner does something to either cross that line or unknowingly violates the rules.

 

Potty Training Your New Puppy

Housetraining

No training is more basic for pet owners than that first important lesson: Do it outside!

Teaching your puppy to eliminate outside the home, not in it, usually starts between six and eight weeks of age. Dogs as young as four weeks have been started on the housetraining, but at that age few have the muscular control to succeed.

With any dog training program, trainer patience is just as important as the dog’s temperament. ‘Sit’, ‘stay’ and other behaviors can often be learned in a few days. House breaking typically takes weeks – sometimes as short as two, often a month or more.

As with other learned behaviors, it helps to watch for signs of the desired elimination and enforce and direct them with a voice command followed by praise. In this case that technique works even more to the trainer’s advantage, since all dogs will naturally eliminate. The tactic is to get them to do it when and where you want!

Watch for circling or squatting, then pick up the pup, say ‘outside’ and sprint outside. The puppy may circle some more, but will often squat quickly. Once it starts, say ‘Go potty’ ( or some other unique phrase) in a clear, firm (but not angry) voice. When the puppy has finished, lavish her with praises.

You won’t always be able to catch the puppy about to potty, but don’t become angry or impatient when the dog eliminates indoors. It takes some time for the dog to learn to tell you it’s time to ‘go outside’. It also takes time for the muscles needed to control the bladder and bowels to develop.

Usually,young dogs need to eliminate every 2-3 hours. If you haven’t spotted pre-elimination behavior within that time, take the dog outside anyway. Issue the command ‘Go potty’ and wait. At first, usually, the dog will have no clue what you want.

Again, even when outside, it helps to wait and watch for the desired behavior then issue the command. That helps the dog associate the command with the behavior. If your puppy hasn’t gone after a few minutes and a few ‘Go potty’ commands, take it back inside for an hour. Of course, if you see the pre-elimination behavior sooner, go outside again immediately.

Puppies have a surprising capacity to quickly learn what their ‘alpha’ (the leader of the pack) wants. This is almost always accomplished by associating a verbal command with behavior, followed by praise. Punishment is usually counter-productive, and nowhere more so than in waste elimination training. Never rub your pup’s nose in waste.

Paper and/or crate training is preferred by some. Your pup can be trained to go on a newspaper, or on one of the chemically treated housebreaking pads designed for the purpose. Some small breeds that live all day in the home may not need to go outside at all.

The technique has a couple of downsides however. Unlike cats, dogs will hardly go in a perfumed litter box. Newspapers (even with the top layer removed after the dog goes) will eventually leave an unpleasant odor in the house.

Also, long before the odor becomes perciptible to humans, dogs can smell their own distinctive aroma. They don’t find it unattractive – quite the opposite. And that is where the problem lays.

Dogs that are paper trained will often prefer to potty indoors. Sometimes they’ll miss the paper by only an inch, causing a mess to clean up.

Once the accident is in the carpet, the dog will often seek that spot out as its proper ‘place to go’. This makes training the dog to eliminate outside even more difficult. Best to suffer a few accidents than to create a hard-to-overcome habit.

Providing patience, praise and consistency are key factors to any dog training. House breaking is the first test for you and your dog.

Get more tips and advice on housetraining or dog training at Luvurdog.com/dogtraining