Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Hello -
I have been reading different discussions this morning looking for some answers/suggestions for our almost 6 month old medium Australian labradoodle, Stella. When my husband and I first brought her home around 12 weeks of age, she had the occasional pee/poop accident (just like any puppy), but has done fairly well with the "potty training" process as we regularly let her outside for potty breaks. Stella has gotten pretty good at going to our back door and barking to let us know she needs to go. It seems, however, that in the past week or two, she has been having more frequent poop accidents inside the house (usually within 10-15 minutes of just being outside). Usually, we don't catch her "in the act," but when we do, we say "no, no, no" and let her outside immediately. We are also diligent in cleaning up the poop immediately with Nature's Miracle to rid the floor of the odor. We have a fenced in backyard and let her out on her own, say "go potty," providing verbal and treat praise as soon as she does her business. If we know she has not pooped in a while, we try to also get her to poo outside before letting her in. Sometimes this works, sometimes not. To throw another wrench in the mix (and this is maybe the real reason we are having issues), Stella very much enjoys being outside and will sometimes bark to go outside, without actually having to go potty. So if she has been out recently and pottied, barks again at the door we think she just wants to go out and play. For a while we let her out every time she barked at the door to prevent accidents, but that got old and frustrating really fast.
From what I have read this morning, I think we will start taking her out on a leash for "potty time" and not let her just go outside on her own. I have also read some owners have different "command" words for pee and poop. Any other suggestions would be greatly appreciated. So sorry for the lengthy and rambling post, but cleaning up poop inside is getting old! We are also somewhat concerned this is becoming behavioral - both her end and our end - and not just a "puppy thing" anymore. Thank you, in advance, for helping us work through this stinky situation!
-Amy, Kris, Marshall (our older labradoodle), & Stella
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I've never had that issue with my dogs but I've seen a couple of tips about that subject...try to feed at regular hours and not let the food always available at any time of the day.After a meal put your dog in his crate for about 15-20 minutes and then take your dog outside and use the command that you prefer... Also if they have a little accident inside take the poop outside with them , apparently it would show them where to go when it's time to potty. Like I said these are tips I've heard worked well,I thought I would share if that helps! Good luck
I agree with the suggestion that if you don't already have a regular feeding schedule, implement one now. From what I've read about any type of behavior issue, you have to take a few steps back in training. So in this instance, and this is without knowing much about your current schedule/supervision habits, I'd say you need to go back to enhancing your supervision. Our puppy Angus is also 6 months and seems to be going through his adolescent phase. If this is impacting Stella's behavior, you have to increase supervision with the puppy - that means keeping them around you and if you're unable to watch Stella then put her in the crate or in a room where she tends to stay. We use the kitchen for this. Our reasoning is more related to other behavior issues (chewing up things around the house or grabbing and shredding papers), but if your puppy is like ours and isn't able to handle the amount of independence/freedom she has, then maybe that needs to decrease until the housebreaking is back on track and you can trust that she knows where to potty.
One more thing - are you giving her a treat right when she goes or when she gets back to the house? With Angus, we would say "good potty" and then give him a treat immediately after he went - this was just in the very beginning. We still say "good potty" after he goes though.
Good luck and happy training! It's frustrating and exhausting, but we just gotta stick with it through the puppy stage!
First of all I would definitely be restricting house access - limit it to the room you are in or her crate or ex-pen. Is she pooping in the same place each time? If so I would block that area off even if it makes you have to go around or step over that area. It will help her break the habit.
One other thought - is she pooping more and is it softer? If so, perhaps she has a parasite.
If Stella is having poop accidents in the house and you don't see her in the act, then you definitely need to monitor her more closely and restrict her access to the house, as others have mentioned. I would suggest you tether her to you when she's not crated so there's no way she could slip away to do her business. Have you tried potty bells? Some dogs respond very well to those, and you do need to go out with her each and every time (on leash) so she knows she's not being let out just to play. I know its tempting to ignore repeated requests to go outside, but during the potty training phase you can't ignore any request. We've always used the words, hurry-hurry for pee and busy-busy for poo. Once we're out in the designated potty spot and I give the cues I can actually see my doodles' minds working, processing whether or not they have to go. A potty schedule works well too to condition them to go at specific times, rather than waiting for them to give you a cue. When my 2 were young and potty training I didn't give them much reason to have to go indoors, as we had regular times throughout the day that we went consistently. Now that they're mature they go out much less frequently, but still on a regular schedule. Good luck!
Oh, and BTW, I was just thinking about it, and I can't remember the last time Oscar 'asked' me to go out for potty. That's how well a schedule works. He doesn't always have to go, mind you, but he always has the opportunity.
Awe. You got your puppy! It's like having a new baby in the house. ;)
I carried Gracie outdoors every morning (and in the afternoons when she was crated) up until last week. It seemed like such a long walk for such a small bladder. :D
You and your family will figure it all out and having a routine and schedule will make things go so much smoother!
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