![]() |
|
Welcome to the YorkieTalk.com Forums Community - the community for Yorkshire Terriers. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. You will be able to chat with over 35,000 YorkieTalk members, read over 2,000,000 posted discussions, and view more than 15,000 Yorkie photos in the YorkieTalk Photo Gallery after you register. We would love to have you as a member! Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please click here to contact us. |
|
![]() |
| LinkBack | Thread Tools |
![]() | #46 | ||
♥ Maximo and Teddy Donating Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 25,047
| ![]() Quote:
Quote:
![]() ![]()
__________________ Kristin, Max and Teddy ![]() | ||
![]() | ![]() |
Welcome Guest! | |
![]() | #47 | |
♥ Maximo and Teddy Donating Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 25,047
| ![]() Quote:
"Charlies" is super cute and I agree, I wouldn't have any regrets. Every dog has his/her challenges. I would trade a little barking for a potty accident or two. ![]()
__________________ Kristin, Max and Teddy ![]() | |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #48 |
No Longer a Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: California
Posts: 421
| ![]() I don't have a video of Charlie pulling the gate, but here is one where DH didn't secure the gate (just pushed it against the wall), so Charlie's nose went into action. I know Charlie makes this look so easy, but all of other dogs were completely perplexed on how he got out. Even after Charlie moved the gate away from the wall, no one else could figure it out. They all stayed in the kitchen and just watched him in the other room. |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #49 |
Resident Yorkie Nut Donating YT 20K Club Member Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 27,490
| ![]() Very cute! ![]()
__________________ |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #50 |
♥ Maximo and Teddy Donating Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 25,047
| ![]() ![]()
__________________ Kristin, Max and Teddy ![]() |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #51 | ||
Action Jackson ♥ Donating Member Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Maryland
Posts: 17,815
| ![]() Quote:
![]() Quote:
__________________ ~ Brit & Lights! Camera! Jackson! CGC ETD TKP ~ ![]() | ||
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #52 | |
Donating YT 500 Club Member Join Date: May 2010 Location: Delray Beach, FL
Posts: 7,984
| ![]() Charlie is a cutie!! My 2 dogs are complete opposites. Cooper took to potty training very quickly and since had only 2 "accidents" that I can remember. The first one was the day we brought Max home. Max squatted on the floor and Cooper figured that was acceptable behavior ![]() Max is a struggle still and what makes him even more difficult is the fact that he schemes. He enjoys eating poop but doesn't eat it outside. It almost seems like he'll wait for me to be on the phone or to be preoccupied and he will go hide in a room and go potty. I think Crystal summed it up perfectly. Sometimes he'll be so nonchalant about it, as if to run an errand. But sometimes I'll catch him and he'll be laying on his back rolling beside it because he doesn't want to get yelled at. I'll even find him sitting in his kennel after the deed is done because he knows he's wrong. I'm home all day and we have a very strict potty routine many times throughout the day. I'd say that Max is about 80% trained. He goes like clockwork every morning after breakfast, but every morning he runs to the living room. I say "come outside to potty Max" and he follows me outside with no problem. It's frustrating but really no big deal. I clean it up. It is unacceptable to let my boys potty in the house but sometimes it's much easier said than done. Quote:
__________________ | |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #53 | |
No Longer a Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: California
Posts: 421
| ![]() Quote:
![]() The first time he "accidently" peed on one our walks (right in the middle of the sidewalk), he gave me that same horrified look. Except I started jumping up and down and cheering and gave him a treat. He sort of got it after that, but there were still accidents for quite a few months. ![]() | |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #54 | |
♥ Maximo and Teddy Donating Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 25,047
| ![]() Quote:
![]()
__________________ Kristin, Max and Teddy ![]() | |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #55 |
♥ Love My Tibbe! ♥ Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: D/FW, Texas
Posts: 22,140
| ![]() I took a long time to potty train Tibbe and he's been totally clean in the house for years. I don't count the time just last month when I forgot it was about his potty time due to my rush to ready for a visitor coming, he needed to potty really badly and was whining and spinning around so fast. I thought he was just excited that he knew we were soon to have a visitor! Finally his whining got really high and frustrated as he spun like a top right at my feet and I told him to be quiet and went on dressing in the bedroom. Later, in the den I found a "mistake" by the door and felt such a fool. Let him outside and cleaned it up, just saying "no potty in house" in a regular voice as I looked him in the eye when I saw it so he would know I wasn't thrilled with what he did but wasn't mad at him at all. I let him outside and then praised him and loved him up when he came back inside so he could know the incident was over. That was my fault entirely - just forgot his schedule in the rush to get ready for our visitor and totally misread his pleadings and spinning to be let outside. And it was the excitement of him knowing the visitor was coming that made that incident. When I am gone from home and it is his time but he's just lying around and not all excited, he holds it. Other than the occasional time when that kind of once-a-year excitement episode happens to Yorkies or Poodles or GSD's, I think Yorkies, like other breeds, can be totally clean in the house once they are grown if they are healthy.
__________________ ![]() ![]() One must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. C. S. Lewis |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #56 |
Ringo (1) and Lucy too! Donating Member Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: On the Edge of Glory
Posts: 3,447
| ![]() I agree that I have been a little lax with Lucy. She has more accidents than any other dog I've ever had. Thank Goodness they are tiny accidents. She's so small and when I first got her - I worked at home - so it was no problem just to take her out every hour or two and that was fine. The problem came if I had to be away at a swim function for 3-4 hours or perhaps all day; of course, I would get someone to come in . . . but, by then, she was used to going out every hour or two. And she wasn't gonna wait any 3-4 hours ![]() Now, I work in an office and she's home all day with my elderly father and his caregiver so I just have to cross my fingers! I know Wilma (caregiver and lovely lady who adores Lucy) lets her out but she's only there half a day . . . then I rely on my son (age 16) when he gets home from school. I know he lets them out when he first gets home but no one is actively watching them after that - to make sure no one is getting into mischief! I will also admit that my time is so torn between full-time work; full-time Mom, caregiver for elderly father; required attendance at various sporting events; teaching my son to drive . . . that this is not my most important hot-button issue. I try to divide my time between EVERYONE each and every day. The time I spend with Lucy and Ringo is MY TIME and we are usually to be found on a trail where Lucy pees and marks like nobody's business!
__________________ ![]() ![]() |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #57 |
YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Jan 2009 Location: Connecticut
Posts: 1,306
| ![]() Rhianna is completely pee pad trained, she was like that when we first got her, she will also go outside as well. Brody on the other hand . . . ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() So, to me, I think it depends on the individual dog really.
__________________ Deb, Mommy to: Brody ![]() ![]() |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #58 | |
YT 500 Club Member Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: Stroudsburg, PA. USA
Posts: 514
| ![]() Quote:
But it is also not the end of the world (for me). Let me try to give you a visual so that you may understand the why, since I'm a very curious person myself and usually, like you here, I'm not judging I'm just curious ![]() My house was referred to as the museum by family and friends. I didn't held get-togethers, parties or entertained more people that I could closely monitor in my house. Every thing was in its place and there was a place for everything. I would tolerate nothing less than cleanness, neatness and complete order. There was absolutely no democracy in my kingdom, I was sole ruler, period. I couldn't stand 'loud' colors on my walls (still can't), my carpets were off-white (or light beige) and light wood and fabrics on my furniture and soft, light draperies. I never went to bed leaving dirty dishes in my sink, never left the bathroon vanity with water splash stains, or the hair blower out. When I said 'spring/winter/summer cleaning', I meant thorough cleaning, not just dusting and picking up. It meant drapes went to the cleaners, curtains that I could wash at home would get washed, ironed and before putting them back, I cleaned the blinds one by one, the windows and screens. Cabinets would get emptied and cleaned inside and out, all its contents washed and dried before being put back. Even top of cabinets would get the grease and dust removed. Every inch of my house would get swept, vacuumed and mopped, top, under, front, back, and sideways... Four times a year this was my ritual. And then there was the maintenance--- keeping it all looking and smelling just as it did when I finished cleaning. That required daily rituals and weekly management. I bought dozens of cheap slippers for man, women and child (prayed that kids would stay home) all sizes I could get at the flea-market, so that people who had to take their shoes off at the foyer, would not leave that awful foot odor on my carpets and which lingered in the air for days anyway even after I sprayed with Fabreeze ![]() Can you believe I was that much of an an** retentive, control freak??? Yep, I was. I feel much better now ![]() You see, I adopted a little girl and she turned my world upside down ![]() Together these two little piggies have thought me what's really important, what's worth having a fit over, what priorities are and what it all means ![]() I'll be honest, I struggled at the beginning ![]() I traded carpets for wood-like floors, invested in ugly colored rugs and made other changes that I wouldn't have been able to live with before they came into my life. When they gave me signs of being totally hose-broken, I got rid of all the obstructions and gave them free range of their home. They did great for a while, but with sickness and disruptions in their lives, plus their daddy being an enabler, they relapse once in a while and do have accidents every now and then. It's not the end of the world for me because I know that after a relapse, I should not expect them to go back to normal in a snap of my fingers. I love them enough to be patient and understanding. And as long as they're healthy, which is my #1 concern, we'll try again, no biggy, no need to get my undies in a twist ![]()
__________________ ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #59 | |
I ♥ Joey & Ralphie! Donating Member | ![]() Quote:
__________________ Nancy ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | #60 |
Therapy Yorkies Work Donating Member Join Date: May 2011 Location: Central, Florida
Posts: 3,863
| ![]() I read the whole thread. IMO it seems like us long time Yorkie lovers confess, Yes, most Yorkies are hard to housebreak. And some Yorkies are never fully housebroken. It is amazing to see how having a Yorkie changes peoples lives and the tolerance they teach us. Like Kate said, you learn what is really important. I would not give up my Yorkies over pottie issues anymore than I would get rid of an incontinent child or relative. You make adjustments. I am blessed with two girls that I would say are truly housebroken. Rubin occasionally marks. Abba and Ginny Joy are only 5 months old so it is a work in progress. I have accepted my home will never be accident free. So is it acceptable ? I guess I have to say yes. Could you pass me a paper towel ? |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() |
Bookmarks |
|
|
| |
|
|
SHOP NOW: Amazon :: eBay :: Buy.com :: Newegg :: PetStore :: Petco :: PetSmart