Monday, 3 October 2011

TrainPetDog 7 tips on Puppy Housebreaking

 

Housebreaking your puppy takes a lot of courage and patience since you are dealing with animals and it is not an easy task to do. If you have pets in your home, it is best to discipline them as soon as possible. However, TrainPetDog.com recommends that you should be consistent in Puppy Housebreaking. You should use proven training techniques else it will take much longer to train them.


TrainPetDog.com recommends the following Puppy Housebreaking tips to help you train your puppy at home.


1. Crate Training-Overnight – This is done by not allowing your puppy to have water before bedtime. Puppies have still small bladders in nature and cannot hold it yet. That is why, puppies urinate frequently. When you do crate training, it is important to consider the size of the crate for your puppy. Choose a crate that is big enough for the puppy to turn around, stand and lay. 2. First thing in the morning – You have to open the crate and take the puppy outside immediately. Walk your puppy until such time that your puppy does the job. Give praises to him instantly and you could also give him a reward such as a piece of cookie for doing a great job. In this way, the puppy will know that by doing a good job, he can receive praises and reward after every good act done. This kind of treatment will have a great impact on your puppy. This technique works best when it is used everyday so that the puppy will remember it always.3. Learn your puppy’s body language – As an owner, you have to be very keen especially when it concerns to the behavior of your puppy. Once you see a change in behavior, it may want to urinate and you must bring your puppy outside immediately and don’t forget your cookie since it will be used later for your puppy after creating a good job. However, it takes longer for a bowel movement. That is why it takes great patience on your part to wait for your puppy to defecate.4. You were not watching close enough – There are times that you will get busy and it is too late for you to take your puppy outside. Do not scold your puppy since it is not the puppy’s fault. Be sure to watch closely next time.5. Suddenly you notice it is about to squat – To prevent this to happen, you have shout out loud like “STOP” to interrupt the act. Take the puppy outside immediately.6. Accidents or setbacks do happen – There are days that training your puppy will not be successful. You still have to take your puppy outside and give him reward when he can do a good job. However, once your puppy is progressing, you have to create a tone of voice that is appropriate to use so that your puppy will know that you are not pleased to the kind of behavior he is doing.7. That’s the routine – TrainpetDog.com recommends that you should use the same puppy housebreaking command to ensure that it will be stored and planted on your puppy’s mind for him to remember the command. Be organized, be watchful, be quick and be persistent and you will be rewarded by you puppy’s achievements.


 

Sunday, 2 October 2011

Puppy Safety Tips

Puppy Safety Tips


Puppy Safety Tips to Keep Your Puppy Safe


Your puppy is a very vulnerable animal, simply because puppies are curious in nature. And with their exploding energy and zest for activity, your little rascal may just get into serious trouble. This can be trouble that pertains to the puppy’s health, or trouble in the form of danger. Thus, you need to take necessary measures to keep your puppy safe. Puppy safety should not be taken lightly. As the dog owner, it is your responsibility to watch over your puppy and keep it away from danger.  


Important Puppy Health Safety Tips


There are several canine diseases that are going around these days. Puppy health safety, especially when it comes to protection against diseases, is in your hands. Unlike in accidents wherein sometimes, you just don’t hold the control, in diseases, you actually do. Most diseases can be prevented, either by vaccinations or other preventive measures such as keeping your dog clean and safe from disease carriers. As a dog owner, it is your responsibility to make sure that your dog receives the proper medical attention regularly, to keep it protected from disease through various vaccinations. It is also your responsibility to groom your dog regularly to protect from fleas and ticks and the diseases they carry. When it comes to ensuring your puppy’s safety pertaining to health, you can do a lot to keep your puppy safe.


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Ensure Your Puppy’s Safety through House and Obedience Training


Puppies can sometimes be uncontrollable, but not with the proper house training and obedience training. These trainings can help tame your curious puppy, and can help ensure your puppy’s safety. The most useful training is to teach your dog which parts of the house to avoid, and which commands your puppy should learn. It is important that your puppy learn the commands associated with leaving or not going near something that is dangerous. It would also be good to expose your puppy to other people and other dogs. A properly socialized dog will be more content and in brighter temperament, which can avoid unfavorable behavior. Teach your puppy how to stay inside its crate. This will help a lot in ensuring your puppy’s safety, especially when you’re not at home. It is also necessary to provide options for entertainment, especially when your puppy is left at home. This will keep it from roaming around the house, destroying things, and getting into danger.  


Puppy Proof Your Home


On your part, you should make your house not only livable, but also safe for your pet. Make sure to keep all dangerous items out of your puppy’s reach, and avoid putting things on top of tall shelves that your puppy can push against. The items on top may just fall on top of your pet and hurt it. Keep the chocolates hidden safely. Also, as your pet is growing, make sure that all cabinets that contain poisonous liquids are locked. It is also important to keep the house clean, especially the rugs where fleas and ticks can hide out before reaching your pup. Also, check the electrical outlets for loose covers or protruding wires that your puppy may come across and chew. Avoid placing glass and other breakable items where your puppy can reach them or cause accidents. Don’t forget to also check the yard. Your puppy needs a place where it can roam freely around for exercise and play. Make sure that that certain place for your puppy is also puppy proof. Puppy safety also means that your puppy should be within your home or yard, and not outside, so make sure that your gates are locked when you allow your puppy to run around out in the yard. Remember that your puppy’s safety lies in your hands, so be a responsible dog owner and ensure your puppy’s safety.


 

Disorders of training House

What to do when your dog just isn't getting it.


 



If your dog is suddenly the difficulty or appears to be go bit infrequently, its time for a quick sample to be taken to the vet. Just use some tweezers and a dixie Cup or throw container any or take your dog to the vet and let them catch you. Often times bacterial infections can cause this problem which is common in puppies and dogs of small size because of their proximity to the ground.


If your dog has been cleared of infection, but you do not see the progress, the following steps must be taken.


1) Make sure that you keep track. If your puppy is accidents still its important to quantify the number of times that they are having accidents and when they occur. If there is a pattern to help you in your training proactive rather than reactive. Or perhaps that the puppy is not have accidents as much as you think.


2) Is the puppy with accidents when you are not around? If so then stop letting your puppy or dog roam. Use Baby gates, dividers, crates, attached to you, regardless of leashes will help keep your puppy to leave where you are. Watch also for these tell-tale signs, stimulation, sniffing, circling, jumping from a position towards the bottom and go somewhere new.


3) Reward the puppy or dog to go outside. It can be easy as friction belly or a small treat, but try to make it worth their time!


Do not punish the dog, they just don't get it yet


Now keep in mind, the small dogs take more time to learn this process and some races are more difficult than others. It probably has to do with the size of their bladder and the amount of control they have effectively. Over the years, I noticed some temperament of dogs get it more easily than others. If you have a dog who came from a Puppy Mill type situation, I would call a trainer of dog local to come and give you advice on your house training problems.


 

Saturday, 1 October 2011

Puppy fear

I was a walking the other day and met with a new puppy that had to be origin of the humane society. It was a cute puppy shortly but obviously a bit nervous on the world. I started thinking if it was my puppy would I teach it?


Originally a new puppy needs time to acclimatize. Remember the period of fear for a puppy (the time that they can develop serious concern) is 12-18 weeks or more (give or take a week or two). Some puppies will go even through a period when they are nervous at things randomly and then pop out of it all suddenly that he started. I remember with Nitro one day he noticed a fire hydrant. He acted as he was out of the US, and he had to protect myself from this terrible thing yellow. Fairly quickly, he learned that the hydrants are pretty darn cool. All these great smells! (Gross yes I know).


On seeing this puppy, that my recommendation would therefore be as a dog trainer? Get a puppy checklist of socialization and start passing by it. I would like to make a puppy to something new, 4-5 times. Keep a checklist and if they are nervous, not write so that you know that you need to return to.


Now, when you are in the moment and your puppy is not wanting to meet someone or fear of something to push with it. Hanging out, ignore the puppy and begin to interact with the object or person. If the puppy is making progress, then you can rent the puppy. You can also give treats to help the puppy along. Often times dogs will overcome their nervousness on their own. Its also very important that the nervous puppy get in a class of socialization of the puppy. A professional trainer can help you set up your plan for your puppy.


Watch your body language of puppies, licking, yawning, shaking, turn around the lips, signs away is your puppy is nervous and you need to go slowly.

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Thursday, 29 September 2011

Puppy Obedience Training - A Few Essential Tips For Success

"Sit! Heel! Fetch!"


...you utter the command, and yet, after months in puppy obedience classes, your pup is still more interested in what smells "like that" on this bush - hahaha!


OK, I'm being a little cruel - but yours is not an isolated case. I'll let you in on a secret (well, maybe not-so-secret after all): don't waste your money on obedience classes if you have a few minutes to spare a day. Have a look at my obedience training tips below and try them out with your puppy later today, and actually - every time you do a training session. It's fun and it will bring you and your puppy closer.


1. Learn how to teach your puppy the 8 basic obedience commands. These are:
COME SIT STAY FETCH QUIET OK NO HEEL These are not just a great way to entertain your family and friend when they come over, but also very useful daily commands for your puppy to learn.


Some of them you will be able to teach him fairly early on (like the NO and OK), but others require a little more maturity and patience. It's good to investigate what's involved in each one right from the beginning though, because inappropriate handling now, will mean hard work for you later trying to undo, what you thought was perfectly normal behavior.


For e.g. the COME command - in the early stages your puppy is too young to learn, so in preparation, you should only use this command when he's already coming towards you. These are the first steps in forming an association between the motion towards you and the command COME. When your pup does reach you praise him - now you're forming the next association - if he's called to COME, and he does, he gets love - aaahh!


So take the time to investigate the above 8 commands - you will reap the rewards later - I promise you.


2. Learn the basic DO's and DON'Ts of puppy obedience training. Here are some of them:
DO's:
Give him rewards in the form of treats, praise or giving him his favorite toy every time he follows your commands. This method is called positive reinforcement - it teaches your puppy that if he performs a certain behavior of which you approve, he will get rewarded for it. It's advisable to start rewarding with treats and love first, and to later on reduce the treats, and increase the love. Whenever you feed your pup, ask him to sit. This reinforces the idea that you are the master and you are the one that provides the food. BTW, don't think that this master' talk is cruel to your puppy. It's not - dogs are pack animals, and they derive comfort and peace from knowing there is a 'pack' structure and routine. You are simply stating to him that food is provided for - and you are in charge of that. Remove his food bowl 20 minutes after you feed him whether there is food left or not. This is not depriving your pup food; this action actually disciplines your dog and makes him aware that he has to depend on you for food, which in turn, makes the puppy training process much faster. Only reward positive behavior. Reward can be in the form of food, attention (positive or negative) and play with his favorite toy. Dogs learn best when you make them focus on the good things. What do I mean (apart from the obvious - that you should reward him when he does the right thing)? If for e.g. he keeps jumping on you to get your attention (which by the way can become a serious obedience problem later on), instead of say to him to get off you (which mean you're giving him attention), turn away at once and move away from him - EVERY TIME until he stops doing it. Let a minute pass with him not jumping on you - then go to him and tell him what a good boy he is.
DON'Ts:
Do not raise your voice whenever you are training your dog. Try to use a well-modulated voice - firm when you mean 'business', softer and more loving when you're praising. Shouting at your dog will only cause him confusion or it will make him associate your voice with fear - meaning problems in obedience training later on. Keep in mind your dog doesn't know what words mean - he recognizes the sound and associates it with the behavior expected of him. So it is important to use the same voice and word command each time you require him to do the same action. Do not physically punish him if he disobeys your commands. This will exacerbate the training process because your dog might learn how to retaliate i.e. biting you back, or worse - he'll learn that your voice means punishment - and who would listen to that? Do not tolerate and reward (with attention) your dog's bad behaviors such as whining in his crate. This will create a very demanding dog later - a dog that will want to be by your side day and night and in your bed as well. Start off right in the beginning by using his crate to instill some good habits in him. If he whines for e.g. wait for him to stop for at least a minute, before you go to him take him out of his crate. This way he learns to respect that there are times when you're together and times when you're apart - but they all end up in 'happy days'.
3. Familiarize yourself with the basic puppy training techniques available and choose one that you feel suit you and your pup. I personally advocate the Positive Reinforcement Method as it is ideal for all pet - owner relationships in domestic situations. But some other methods may be suitable for training a working dog for e.g.


So here are the most popular methods that you can investigate and try out:
Positive Reinforcement Method Clicker Training Method Dog Whispering Method Ultrasonic Whistling Method To round up here - remember that puppy obedience training is like raising a kid; it takes a lot of dedication, consistency, patience and love. But once you get the hang of it, living with your dog will be one of the most fulfilling experience of your life. The love your dog will give you in return will far outweigh the demands of obedience training.


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Wednesday, 28 September 2011

How to Train a Yorkshire Terrier - Tips on Training a Yorkshire Terrier

Yorkshire terriers are great dogs. But they are really difficult to train. Especially when you're not sure what to do to get your dog to obey and follow your commands. So, what I'm going to do is share with you some tips on how to train a yorkshire terrier.


This way, you will be able to train your dog easily to do the things you want them to do.


The first thing you should know about yorkies is that they love attention. I'm sure you may already be aware of that from your dog. But they really love attention. This is great for you, because you will be able to get their full attention. But you have to make sure there's nothing around to distract your dog.


When you have your dog full attention, tell them the command you want them to learn. Also, show them. At first they will probably try to lick you or get excited because they think it's play time. But just be patient. Your little guy will catch on quick.


Another tip on how to train a yorkshire terrier is to reward them when they do a great job. Let your dog know that they're doing great. You can also do this by giving your yorkie a treat. They love treats and will respond faster when they know they'll get a reward.


If you're trying to potty train a yorkshire terrier, then what you should do is put your dog on a schedule. Every few hours take your yorkie outside to potty. This will let them know that you expect them to potty outside and not inside the house. I know a lot of people have a hard time with these when they're wanting to know how to train yorkshire terrier.


Now, if you want to train your dog to potty in the house, but on a doggie pad, then what you have to do is take some of your dog's poop (I'm know it's nasty) and place it onto the doggie pad. Also, walk your dog over to the doggie pad and show them that that's the place for them to potty.


Your dog will see that the pad is the place for them to potty and so your yorkie will start pottying on the pad from now on. It will probably take a few times of you showing them but they will definitely get the hang of it and do what you say.


 


Simple Effective Tips For Choosing the Best Small Dog Training Collar

What is a small dog training collar and how do you choose the best kind? To answer the first question in the simplest manner, this is a device that is designed for small dogs, particularly those that weigh less than 15 pounds. As for which kind of collar works best, perhaps the choice would be made easier for you if we first outlined which training collars are NOT advisable.


A choke chain is probably the oldest and most common small dog training collar being used. However, this device, coupled with a lot of hard jerking from the trainer is hardly the ideal technique to use on small dogs. In fact, choke collars have been known to cause severe neck sprains, temporary foreleg paralysis, and tracheal damage, among others. Choke collars may be your best bet if you want to be a hundred percent sure that your dog won't be able to slip out of his collar, but it is definitely not the most humane equipment to use in dog training.


A pinch collar is another common training equipment. It is more advisable than choke collars for use in small dog training because it is known to have saved a lot of dogs' lives. In fact, it is now the most popular small dog training collar among women, the elderly, and dog owners with disabilities or injuries. This may be because it takes much less energy to make a dog respond to a pinch collar than to other training collars and equipment.


This small dog training collar is very effective because its mechanism is based on pure logic. If you notice, mother dogs normally nip at their offspring to correct bad behaviour. The pinch collar, therefore, only mimics a form of correction that a dog is very familiar with, thus making him respond better to it than to any other type of training collar. Furthermore, this type of training collar was developed by a qualified veterinarian who knows exactly how to protect your dog from collar injuries. You are therefore assured that it is a safe and more humane alternative to other training collars.


Of course, you'll have to remember that a pinch collar is simply a training tool and is meant to be used exclusively during training rather than as your dog's permanent accessory. It is best used to train dogs with tracheas that can easily be damaged, such as Dachshunds and Jack Russel Terriers. The pinch collar can be a very good starting point in training small dogs, but sooner or later you'll have to learn to communicate with your dog even without a small dog training collar.


Finding the best collar especially for little dogs is indeed a difficult and delicate task, but once you know which types of collar you should NOT use, the task of choosing the right collar becomes a whole lot easier. What is important is for you to always consider your dog's safety and well-being above all other factors and considerations. As long as you have done this then everything else will fall into place.