Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
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Rosie has been fairly easy to train. We have had her for 2 weeks now and she only had 2 accidents in the house. I started off by only allowing her access to our living room. I took up our area rugs so that I would now for sure if she went, and wouldn't ruin our rugs! I made sure that we played in every square inch of the living room so that it would be known as play area. In the beginning with all the new smells I took her out literally about every 15 minutes. We stayed outside each time until she pottied. If I wasn't playing with her, if I had to have my attention away from her for even a minute I put her in her crate, then immediately took her out again. I've slowly allowed access to each room of our house (main floor only). In each room I make sure I lay down on the floor and play with her in that area. It needs to be designated as play, eat or sleep area in the puppies mind. We now go out AT LEAST once per hour, sometimes more. The minute she isn't playing or resting I take her back out. It's a lot of work but it will be worth it later. I hope this helps!
~ Stacy & Rosie
Hi Nicole,
Since I am going through the same situation as you, I may be able to share some tibits. It's been over a decade since I had a puppy and so I probably have most of the same concerns.
Our puppies are nine weeks old now and this is what my family has been doing in regards to potty training:
• First thing we noticed is her having diarrhea issues. This also meant that Lucy was drinking a lot of water to hydrate herself. This had caused us to take her out to pee almost every hour for the first 4 days- and nights! There was some few drops inside the house probably because he puppy bladder couldn't hold the amount she was drinking. I was able to take a few days off from work to spend more time with Lucy and eventually learned about chicken, broth and rice. Now things are more consistent.
• I also notice that Lucy doesn't completely finish with her #1 when I take her outside due to being curious of her surroundings. We have to spend a bit more time outside calling her attention to "hurry up". She mostly goes twice before she's ready to go back inside.
• We always have her on a 6 foot leash at all times so we can monitor every action.
• Lucy can now stay in kennel form 10;30pm to about 5:30am. But as soon as I open the cage, she steps out and tries to pee immediately, so I have to carry her outside quickly. I will try to let her out one time between those hours to make things easier for her.
Lucy had diarrhea the first few days with the new dog food, so after researching this, we decided to do the rice and chicken ( with chicken broth) mixture and she started to get more solid output. We are currently changing the ratio of rice/chicken: dog food slowly. I feed her in her crate. And from time to time, I take her food out for a bit and give it back for her to continue eating. This shows her that I'm pack leader and also helps pace the way she consumes food.
Lucy, at almost 10 weeks, can now sit, down, rollover and stay ( for maybe over a minute). Since we can't bring her out on walks due to her not having all of her shots yet, we try to run her in the backyard. Once she's a bit tired and hungry, we start training using her dog kibbles as the treat. We started with sit, then down. Once we got her to go in down position, we were able to teach her to roll over. Stay command is still a challenge, but after all, she's still a puppy.
Our 12 yr old lab is starting to get used to her, but still shows teeth when she approaches him too assertively ( we always have her on leash). This gives us solo time for training without distractions. We plan to socialize Lucy once we get the go-ahead from the vet. Please post pictures!
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