Saturday, July 31, 2010

Any advice on the best way to house train a male puppy German Shepard?

I am dog savvy, but I've never trained a male German Shepard puppy. Anyone extremely familiar with or breed them? I don't need jerk off advice so please if you have never house trained a puppy DON'T BOTHER.Any advice on the best way to house train a male puppy German Shepard?
Training a GSD pup isn't really any different than training any other breed. It takes consistency and patience.





Devise a feeding/elimination schedule and adhere to it strictly. Take the pup out hourly (or every couple of hours depending on age). When the dog eliminates outside, offer physical and verbal praise, and the occasional treat as a reward. Be consistent with this and you should have very few accidents in the process. You could also explore crate training as an option. Here's a link.


http://www.inch.com/~dogs/cratetraining.…Any advice on the best way to house train a male puppy German Shepard?
You can train a german shepard the same way you train any dog. Its their individual personality that can effect how you train them.





Here's a great article on house training





House Training Puppies and Dogs


If given a choice, dogs prefer to eliminate away from the areas where they eat, sleep, and play. Dogs eliminate in the house for a variety of reasons:


- There might be a medical cause for the problem.


- The dog might not have been properly trained to eliminate outside.


- The dog might be marking his territory.


- The dog might urinate when excited, intimidated, anxious or upset.





House training is accomplished by establishing a surface and location preference AND by preventing the dog from eliminating in unacceptable places. Crating and confinement needs to be kept to a minimum, but some amount of restriction is usually necessary for the puppy or dog to learn to “hold it.” Understand that house training demands an investment of time and effort. Puppies are sometimes not fully house trained until they are 8-12 months of age. As a general rule, a puppy can only hold his waste for the same number of hours that he is old, in months. In other words, a four-month-old pup should not be left alone during the day longer than four consecutive hours without an opportunity to go outside. By the time the pup is four months old, he should be able to make it through the night without going outside. Adult dogs adopted from shelters are often not fully housetrained and need a refresher course.





What to do:





1. Keep the dog on a consistent daily feeding schedule and remove food between meals.





2. Know where your dog is at all times. To anticipate and prevent accidents, you need to watch for early signs that he needs to eliminate. These signs include pacing, whining, circling, sniffing and leaving the room. If you see any of these, take the dog outside as quickly as possible. Not all dogs learn to let their owner know they need to go outside by barking or scratching at the door. Some will pace a bit and then just eliminate inside.





3. If you cannot watch the dog, confine him to a crate, a small room (with the door closed or baby-gated), or tether him to you with a leash that does not give him much leeway. Gradually, over days or weeks, give the dog more freedom. If the dog eliminates outside, give him some free time in the house (maybe 15-20 minutes to start). If all goes well, gradually increase the amount of time out of confinement.





4. Accompany the dog outside and reward him with praise, treats, play, or a walk whenever he eliminates outdoors. It’s best to take the dog to the same place each time, as the smells may prompt the dog to eliminate. Some dogs will eliminate early on in a walk; others need to move about and play for a bit first.





5. Take the dog outside on a consistent schedule. Puppies should be taken out every hour, as well as shortly after meals, playtime and naps. All dogs should get out first thing in the morning, last thing at night, and before being confined or left alone. Adult dogs must get out at least four times a day.





6. If you can catch the dog in the act of eliminating inside, SHRIEK loudly. Immediately run to the dog and rush him outside. If he is small, pick him up; otherwise, just grab him by the collar and run outside with him. The idea is to startle him, which should stop him in mid-stream. Allow the dog to finish outside, and reward him. If you do not catch the dog in the act, do not do anything to the dog.





7. Clean accidents with an enzymatic cleanser to minimize odors that might attract the dog back to the same spot.





What not to do:





- Do not rub the dog’s nose in his elimination.





- Do not scold the dog, unless you catch him in the act of eliminating in an inappropriate place.





- Never, ever physically punish the dog for accidents; that includes hitting with a rolled-up newspaper.





- Do not crate your dog if he is soiling in the crate.





- If the dog enjoys being outside, don’t bring the dog inside right after he eliminates—he may learn to “hold it” to stay outside.





- Do not use an ammonia-based cleanser. As urine contains ammonia, this could attract the dog back to the same spot to urinate again.





Above all, please be patient! If a puppy has an accident, it is not because he is spiteful or lacking in the ability to learn—it’s because the owner failed to adequately supervise him, didn’t take him outside frequently enough, or ignored or was unaware of the dog’s signals to go outside.






Well, whats worked for me is crate training. Keep the pup in the crate at night to minimize accidents. first thing in the morning take him out. When he goes outside, go fun nuts with the pup, priaing him a lot. A half hour after eating or drinking, take him out! If he goes inside, use a good stern voice, show him what he did wrong, tell him a good firm No, tap his nose with a finger, and bring him outside, when he goes outside, praise him. get down on all fours and play with him, let him know he did good. If your consitant, he should be house trained in no time. But the biggets step is you be persistant, if your not persistant, youll send mixed signals to the pup as to what is right and wrong. Give him plenty of potty times during the day too. Even at night, you might want to just set your alarm, wake up, take him out, let him know he did good. Then back in the crate. Wake up first thing in the morning, and bring him right outside, your potty can wait, but let him do his so he gets the message that it has to be done outside.
The key to rock-solid housetraining is to start the day your pup comes home and stick with the program. Using a crate is the easiest method. (For older dogs, see housetraining adult dogs). In a nutshell, here are the basic steps:





1. Take time off to housetrain your puppy.


2. Start using a crate the day you bring her home.





3. Take your puppy outside for a bathroom break every one to two hours during the day.





4. Plan a middle-of-the-night potty run for young puppies.





5. Shower her with treats and praise when she does a good job.





6. Don't punish your pup for accidents you haven't seen.





Here's how to properly house train your puppy http://tinyurl.com/3o2rse
I have had 2 female GSD, I shouldn't think there is any difference in the sexes. We crated her at night, they both woke me up approximately 1 in the morning for a potty break, then straight back inside and back too bed. It took them a couple of months before they could sleep through the night, but they never had an accident in their bed. During the day I took them outside every 60 minutes, always took some treats in my hand and if they did do something I said ';go potty'; continuously while they did it, then gave them the treat. They were potty trained very quickly, they are clean intelligent dogs, it will not be a problem
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crate training is the best easiest and most effective

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