HOW
TO HOUSEBREAK YOUR NEW PUPPY
Follow
these guidelines to make housebreaking as easy as possible for you and
your new puppy.
Start
at the ideal age. The best time to begin housebreaking a puppy is when
it is 7-1/2 to 8-1/2 weeks old. At this age you can teach the puppy
where to eliminate before it has established its own preferences. Don't
worry if your puppy is older when you start housebreaking ...it will
still learn with no problems.
Six
to eight times a day, take your puppy outdoors to eliminate. Choose an
appropriate spot to take the puppy immediately after it wakes up, after
play sessions, and 15 to 30 minutes after meals. If you take your puppy
to the same spot every day, previous odors will stimulate it to urinate
or defecate. Many puppies need 15 to 20 minutes of moving around and
sniffing before they eliminate. Stay with the puppy the whole time.
Housebreaking problems can result if you're unsure whether the puppy
actually eliminated and you let it return to the house too soon.
Remember, the puppy needs to focus on the job at hand, so don't play
with it until it has eliminated.
Use
a key phrase while your puppy eliminates. If you repeat the same
phrase....”go potty” or “take care of
business” every time your puppy eliminates outdoors, it will
learn that this phrase means that it's the right time and place to
eliminate.
Once
the puppy eliminates outdoors, immediately reward it. Reward the puppy
by praising it, giving it a treat, or playing with it.
Remember...”reward it right away.” The puppy will
not learn to eliminate outdoors if the reward comes when it returns to
the house. Instead, the puppy will think that it's being rewarded for
coming inside.
Supervise the puppy indoors as well as outdoors. Find a room in your house that allows you to watch your puppy as much as possible. This will help you catch the puppy if it starts to eliminate indoors. You can also leash the puppy or place a bell on its collar to help you keep track of it.
When
you leave home, put the puppy in a crate. When you can't supervise your
puppy, leave it in a small puppy-proof place such as a crate. If the
crate is large enough to accommodate the puppy as an adult, partition
it to avoid having the puppy soil one end and sleep in the other.
Remember, young puppies' bladder and bowel capacities are limited, so
let the puppy out at least every 4 hours.
Don't
punish after the fact. If your puppy has an accident in the house,
don't go get the puppy and rub his nose in it. This doesn't do any good
because the misbehavior has already occurred. Instead, try to catch the
puppy in the act. If you see the puppy getting ready to house soil,
don't swat it, but stomp your foot, sake a can filled with pennies, or
startle the puppy by yelling, “outside!” The puppy
will likely stop what it's doing, and you can take it outdoors to
eliminate. Don't leave food out all day. Feed your puppy at set times
every day and remove the food bowl after 20 minutes. This will create
regular intervals at which the puppy will need to eliminate.
Thoroughly
clean areas where the puppy has eliminated in the house. Your
veterinarian can recommend a safe, effective product that removes both
odors and stains. It's important to clean a soiled area completely,
otherwise your puppy may return to it and eliminate again.
Stick with the training program. Most puppies and be successfully housebroken by 14 to 20 weeks of age. A pet may take longer to housebreak for several reasons. Consult your veterinarian if you are having difficulty.