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If a full grown dog has decided it prefers the carpet to the potty pads I would be taking that dog out for a good brisk walk several times a day and making sure it did it's business while out there. Would also suggest gating in an uncarpeted room with pee pads when not at home. |
Lol, lovespandp. That's what I tell Milo. My kids are 18 and 21 and they say you love him to much u would never give him away. I say I know just look at those eyes. He's just a baby. Lol |
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Ive never thought about it that way!:thumbup::thumbup::thumbup::thumbup::thumbup:: thumbup::thumbup::animal-pa |
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Yep same here. Mine is potty pad and outside trained. He does really well but does have his occasional slip ups. It seems to be getting less frequent that he slips up so that's a good sign. |
I let him know we are not happy with him when he goes where he shouldn't. I think that's helping. I can tell he wants to be good and me to be happy with him. I feel the tone in my voice when he potty's on the floor lets him know I am not happy with it. He knows when he goes where he is suppose to because I'll praise him and tell him how good he is. I think after a while if you stick to it, letting them know by telling them whats wrong with a tone he understands means your unhappy and whats right in tones he knows he did good, they will learn.. |
our lacy is hit or miss. i can let her out in the morning and she will stare at me at the glass door.. so this past week we have been walking 3 times a day .. no accidents.. but thats what happens to alot of people in my opinion.. we will do great for a few weeks... than we slip up and not walk them for a day because work or life happens... than bam all of a sudden its like everything is in vein |
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The most important part is watching them so closely its not possible for them to potty somewhere. Thats atleast what made it click with Joel, I didn't LET him have an accident and he forgot how to "go" in the house lol. But when he kept having accidents I was getting frustrated and wondering what I was doing wrong, so I would set alarms and leash him to me, or whatever I had to do for him not to go potty in the house, and after a few days of no accidents is when I saw him figuring it out, and then he would just start telling me.:) Now he's 8months and I dont remember the last time he had an accident and I no longer even remind him to go out, only when he first comes out from the crate, all he knows is to go to the door and whine or bark. |
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:thumbup: My boys are 100% trained. They have access to their puppy pads at all times. They each have an ex-pen set up in our bedroom, with a bed, water, and pad in each pen. The doors to the pens are only closed when we are at work or gone, and the only reason they don't have free roam of the house is because even though I know they would sleep all day, I'd still be worried one of them would get hurt somehow. They don't mind being in them either, which helps. They sleep with us at night, and if they need to use their pads during the night, they do. I think it helps that we have never moved their pads too. They will potty outside too, but we don't have much of a yard, and it's not fenced in so they are always on leashes unless we visit friends with a fenced in yard. They still get daily walks, unless its too cold out. Pad training was our decision because of us both working as well, and knowing they have small bladders. They each picked it up pretty fast (it helped that the breeder started pad training too) and by the time they were 5-6 months have had no accidents......except for 2. Chase pooed in the middle of the living room floor the day after we brought Calvin home, but that was the extent of him letting us know that he wasn't sure about his new brother yet :rolleyes: and once last month Chase was sick and tried to make it to his pad but just couldn't. |
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