You might be feeling a little down right now since potty training your dog is taking longer than you anticipated. It's okay whether this describes your situation, or if you're just considering about adopting a puppy, because the toilet training issues can be resolved with patience and the methods I'll show you.
To successfully train your puppy to use the bathroom outside, you must create a "den" environment in your home. A puppy's innate sense of freedom leads it to believe it can defecate wherever and whenever it likes (except for their den.) Read more about brain training for dogs in this article…Click here
As a rule, the "den" shouldn't (and usually can't) be the entire house at first. At first, put the puppy's crate in a tiny, closed-off section of the house that will serve as its den (You will probably need some sort of gate to hold your puppy in.) Your puppy will learn that the space where he eats and sleeps is his den.
Even though your puppy probably won't go potty there voluntarily, he will have no choice. In the first three months of his existence, your puppy will need to be taken after every activity (playing, eating, and waking up from a nap) (These are the most common times puppies will relieve themselves).
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Even if your puppy isn't doing any of these activities, you still need to take him out around every 30 to 45 minutes.
Your puppy will only be able to hold his urine for around seven hours at night for the first three months of his life. By maintaining a consistent schedule of putting your dog to rest and waking him up, you can increase this time to roughly nine hours.
Maintaining this routine will prevent your dog from needing to go outside in the middle of the night. As soon as he's awake, you should take him outside. Give him some leash time and he'll use the restroom.
Advice: Pick a certain area of grass as the designated pee site for your puppy. This way he will be prepared when you take him there. If you take your puppy outside and he uses the bathroom, give him a treat. Don't ever chastise or penalise your puppy if he has an accident.
Dogs live in the now and now, so he won't realise he's being punished for anything in the past. Rather than helping, this will simply scare the dog. Maintain a regular feeding routine for your puppy.
If you know when the supplies are being delivered, you may anticipate when the meals will be served. Do not let your dog have any opportunity to go potty in an inappropriate area. The more often it occurs, the more he justifies it in his mind.
Even though you rarely catch your puppy in the act, he may warn you in advance. You must keep a tight eye on your dog whenever he is in the house. Perhaps you've noticed him sniffing around or circling a certain area. If that's the case, he probably needs to go to the bathroom, so now would be a good time to take him outside.
A successful attempt to frighten your puppy out of urinating or defecating can still be made if you catch it in the act. Stomping toward your dog is a good method for this. It's fine if your dog has an accident in the house.
For the first six months (or more for some breeds), no matter how diligently you work at potty training, your puppy is likely to have a few accidents. Read also: Treatment and Prevention of Dog Separation Anxiety
Paper towels, vinegar, water, and a stain and odour remover are all you'll need to clean up both faeces and urine. Use the paper towels first to soak up the urine.
Then, combine some vinegar with water and use that to wet a paper towel. Just grab a paper towel, wet it, and rub the affected area. The last step is to use additional paper towels to dry the area and then use your stain and odour remover spray.
Stool should be removed from the area immediately using a paper towel. Then, use another towel soaked in water and vinegar to scrub the area. Use a dry paper towel to absorb any remaining moisture, then spray the area with the stain and odour remover.