create your own

House Training Your Adult Dog

84
rate or flag this page

By justmesuzanne

It is a dog’s nature to want to please you.

If you are consistent in being firmly disappointed when your dog has an accident and extremely happy when he relieves himself appropriately, he will quickly learn to do as you wish.

Crate Training Helped Amber With House Training.

Amber was a wild 9-month-old when I got her with no training at all.  Crate training made house training easy.  Copyright/Photographer: SuzanneBennett:
Amber was a wild 9-month-old when I got her with no training at all. Crate training made house training easy. Copyright/Photographer: SuzanneBennett:


Most dogs will house train within a week or two.

Having an adult dog that has accidents in the house can be very distressing and very wearing, but this is often the case when you adopt an adult dog. The situation could arise from lack of training or improper training from the dog's previous owner, or it could just be that the dog is confused or frightened in his new surroundings.

When determining how to go about managing this situation, there are a few things you should look at. First of all, does the dog have accidents in the same place every time, or is it random? If he is using the same spots every time, it means that he thinks that is where he is supposed to go. If it is random, it may indicate a medical problem or a dietary problem.

If you are feeding a food that is too rich, it can cause your dog to have accidents. Cheaper foods that have lots of artificial colors and filler can cause problems. Buy a good brand of dog food that is right for the age and activity level of your dog. For example, if your dog is mostly a house dog and only goes on a walk once a day, don't give him a high energy, high protein, performance food. Give your dog a food designed for mature dogs with a low to moderate level of activity.

If your dog is an unnueutered male, know that this can contribute to the problem in regards to urination. An intact male dog may want to mark his territory. Neutering may or may not help with this problem, but it is always a good idea, anyway. A neutered male dog makes a better household pet, and having your pets spayed./neutered is the responsible thing to do to avoid the currently overwhelming problem of unwanted and abandoned pets.

Once you have ruled out or dealt with medical and dietary problems, you can begin training. Crate training is a good idea if you have to leave your dog in the house when you are out. With crate training, you put the dog in a traveling crate just big enough for your dog to stand up and turn around in whenever you are gone and cannot watch your dog or let him out. Although this may seem mean, it really isn't. dogs sleep most of the time, anyway and don't move much from one spot. Using a crate helps to house train the dog because he will not want to relieve himself where he sleeps.

Having your dog crate trained is also handy when you have friends over who are afraid of dogs, or if you just need to put your dog out of the way for awhile so that you can work on your house or do some other thing where he would be in the way. Crate training is also useful in cases of destructive chewing. It is a good way to protect your belongings and keep peace in your home. My dog is crate trained, and she stays in the crate whenever I go out. It is a safe place for her, and she prefers to be in the crate during thunderstorms because she is very frightened of them.

So, to crate train you would begin with fairly short periods of time, say an hour or two. You can gradually build up to a full work day. If you need to be gone longer than that, you will want to make arrangements for someone to check on your dog and take him out to relieve himself and play a little bit.

When you begin training, take your dog out to his specified area and be sure he relieves himself before you leave. Put your dog in the crate with a good sturdy chew toy, and leave. Don't leave any food or water. This will just make a mess and may cause your dog to need to relieve himself. When you come back, let your dog out first thing and take him straight outside to his designated area. When he relieves himself, praise him mightily. He will soon learn that there is one place to relieve himself, and it is not in your house! If your dog has an accident in the crate, don't scold him. Just take him to his designated spot and go through the drill. He will be embarrassed enough, and dogs hate to make a mess where they sleep, so having an accident in the crate is something your dog will be motivated to avoid.

To avoid accidents, you will also want to be sure that you take your dog out often, to the same place and use the same words every time to encourage him to do his business. Praise your dog when he relieves himself appropriately outside. Tell your dog something like, "Good dogs poop outside!" or whatever you are comfortable with, but just be sure it is the same words said the same way every time.

If you do find that your dog has had an accident in the house, and especially if you catch him at it, take him firmly by the collar, show him the offending item, and firmly tell him "NO!" Then take your dog outside to the place where he is supposed to relieve himself and use those key words to inform him that "Good dogs poop outside!". If you can leave him safely outside to think about it, this is a good reinforcer. Dogs hate to be separated from their best friend (you!) so a 15 minute time-out is a helpful way to seal the lesson. But only do this if your dog can be secured inside a fence or by a tether. Don't ever let your dog run loose.

In my experience, most dogs will house train within a week or two. Of course it takes longer for puppies, but the basic training principles are the same. If training takes longer than a couple of weeks for an adult dog, be sure to consult your veterinarian. Have your dog checked for any health problems that may be causing the accidents.

You have two things on your side with house training. First, it is a dog's nature to want to please you. If you are consistent in being firmly disappointed when your dog has an accident and extremely happy when he relieves himself appropriately, he will quickly learn to do as you wish. Second, dogs don't want to make messes where they live and sleep. If your dog feels firmly established in your home and has his own crate to sleep in, he will know that the house is not the right place to relieve himself. You just need to show him, firmly and consistently, where the right place is, and soon that is where he will go.

Copyright: SuzanneBennett: November 6, 2008

This Airline Kennel Style is Best!

Petmate Pet Porter 2 Kennel, Medium, Dark Gray Petmate Pet Porter 2 Kennel, Medium, Dark Gray
Price: $47.97
List Price: $69.99
Firstrax 19-Inch Pet Suites Multi-Use Pet Kennel Firstrax 19-Inch Pet Suites Multi-Use Pet Kennel
Price: $20.16
List Price: $24.99
Ithaka 6 Pet Carrier Ithaka 6 Pet Carrier
Price: $130.07
List Price: $186.49
Petmate Pet Porter 2 Crate, Extra Large, Gray Petmate Pet Porter 2 Crate, Extra Large, Gray
Price: $149.88
List Price: $179.99

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

TheBigGuy  says:
8 months ago

Thanks for the advice on my question. My dog has not had any accidents in the house in a few days. She knows where she has to go outside but sometimes it just takes her a while to go. According to your article and other articles I've read it says that dogs won't go where they sleep. My dog does when we leave. The reason we've gotten for this is because she's so nervous she can't help herself. Do you really think socialization could be the solution? Is it a confidence thing?

justmesuzanne profile image

justmesuzanne  says:
8 months ago

Hi! I'm glad I could help you! I think socializing may help peripherally with her having accidents in her crate. I think it may be a confidence thing. Socializing will definitely help the cringing and threatening to bite that you describe in your question on Advice.com. The threatening to bite really needs to be addressed. She needs to learn not to feel so threatened. Good luck! :) Suzanne

Ilovemydog  says:
5 weeks ago

Hi.My dog is 7 years old. I am in school now. I have not been at home as much lately. My dog has been messing in the house. I know this is my fault because I have not been home as much. However it is becoming a complete habit. She does not like to go to the bathroom outside now. If I put her in a crate, she hurts her self and uses the bathroom in there and rolls in it and make a complete mess out of the cage and herself. I don't know what to do. My house is beginning to stink. I willing to take the time to get her back on track...I just don't know how to do this successfully with out the crate. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Please help!

justmesuzanne profile image

justmesuzanne  says:
5 weeks ago

Set up a regular schedule to take her out and retrain her to relieve herself outside. Every hour would not be too much. Praise her lavishly when she toilets outside. Say NO firmly and be very disappointed when she toilets in the house. If you have a fenced yard or you can safely tie her out for 15 minutes or so right after saying NO, it will reinforce what you want. If you are not able to take her out every hour yourself, perhaps you could hire a dogsitter (friend, neighbor, local teenager) to help you with this. The consistency will be the most important thing. Also, be sure you are feeding a high quality food because this will reduce the number of times she needs to relieve herself.

Good luck!

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working