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How to HouseBreak Your Puppy in 3 Easy Steps
Home :: Pets
By: Linda Richards Email Article
Word Count: 544 Digg it | Del.icio.us it | Google it | StumbleUpon it

  

You've brought your adorable puppy to your home and you're wondering how hard it's going to be to housebreak him. If you follow these three easy steps, you should be able to housebreak your puppy in no time at all.

Step 1 - for the first two or three days, take your puppy outside to the same location every hour and wait for him to relieve himself. Don't move from that location and don't walk him. Let him have the length of his four-to-six foot leash. Praise him profusely as soon as he goes, and provide him a few pieces of his puppy food.

Make certainly to pet, kiss, and hug him too, and reward him with a walk around the block. After his walk, allow him a supervised free run of the house for 20 minutes. Then put him into his housetraining crate for 35 minutes. (You should discard the crate once your puppy is housetrained.)

If you've waited outside for more than 20 minutes, and your puppy hasn't relieved himself, bring him back home and put him into his crate for 20 minutes (just to assure that he doesn't relieve himself in your house), then take him outside again. Repeat this process until he relieves himself outside.

Make sure to take him out right before you go to bed. You'll also want to take him out once or twice throughout the night without taking him for a walk or letting him run around the house. You may lose some sleep now, but it will save you many sleepless nights in the future.

Step 2 - during the next week, take your puppy out once every 90 minutes throughout the day and as needed in the middle of the night. He'll let you know when he needs to go. Throughout the day, if he relieves himself outside, give him 30 minutes of supervised boundless run and play time. If he doesn't relieve himself, again put him back into his crate for 35 minutes. Always supervise his indoor activities, and don't give him an opportunity to fail.

Progressively add time to his supervised free run and crate time until he's successfully holding it for three hours during free run time, and four daytime hours in the crate. Don't forget to take your puppy outside the instant after he leaves his crate to avoid accidents inside your house.

Step 3 - within about 10 days, your puppy should have a good understanding of what's expected of him. But you shouldn't stop your training efforts. If you catch your puppy sniffing around the house and squatting, shout "outside!" and take him outside at once. Praise him outside as he finishes up. It is essential that you continue to watch him closely during his indoor free run time, so that you can catch him in the act if he has a bit more to eliminate.

It will take a little bit of work at the beginning to housebreak your puppy, but you'll find it's worth it in the long run.

Linda Richards is an expert at dog behavior training who offers step-step instructions on how to obedience train your dog. For more valuable dog training tips and techniques visit: http://www.dogobedienceformula.com

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