Dog Obedience Training Blog
Recently, I have been asked to write an article to help those of you who are having problems with adult dogs after a major stressful event or a move. Depression, potty accidents, chewing, and changes in eating and sleeping patterns are common.
Understanding Dog Psychology
Dogs feel stress just like humans do, however what we see as a normal event dogs often perceive as stressful.
When faced with stress or change, dogs often revert back to what they know best, which are often behaviors which were imprinted when they were puppies.
If you travel through airports with your dog, you may need to find an area where your dog can potty. Here’s a site which gives you the option to select a specific airport with their information of where to relieve your pooch.
Where to Relieve Your Pet
We have information on places to potty your dog at the following airports:
For more airport listings.
It is springtime, the time of year when we begin spring cleaning and we get back outside to our lawns, gardens, and flowers. Many people want a pristine yard, but their dog’s urine kills the grass.
Supplements abound and homeopathic advice that claims to change the PH of your dog’s urine and therefore keep the urine from burning your yard, however there are imperative things for you to know before you give your dog these supplements or any other suggested remedy. Read the rest of this entry »
courtesy of ihasahotdog.com
Just goes to show, dogs are smarter than we give them credit. This little guy didn’t take his master’s word for it, he looked it up for himself.
Webster’s Thesaurus: Pad -
2 a place set aside for sleeping <went back to my pad to get some rest> — see bed 1
On a side note, if you’re currently trying to use potty pads to house train your puppy, you need to listen to the bonus interview that comes with my Hands Off Dog Training course, it’ll really open up your mind, and show you why you’re struggling to potty train your dog.
courtesy of www.sixwise.com
We’ve all been there. You are relaxing in your easy chair and your furry companion wants to cozy up for a petting session or just settle into your lap for a nap, when all of the sudden, you are engulfed with an aroma that is beyond unpleasant, it’s downright disgusting!
Dog Gas: What Causes Doggy Flatulence … and What Can You do About It?
posted 2/17/10, www.sixwise.com
Does your dog have problems with flatulence that can easily clear a room? It’s nothing personal … just a normal process that occurs when bacteria in your dog’s digestive tract breaks down his food.
However, while some gas is normal, excessive flatulence can be a sign that something is amiss in your dog’s diet.
What’s Causing Your Dog’s Gas?
As in humans, flatulence in dogs is often related to the foods they eat.
It occurs when a food does not get completely broken down in the stomach and small intestine. The food then reaches the large intestine in this undigested state, and bacteria there get to work, essentially breaking the morsel down further.
Crate training your dog is an important decision. Does it really work? The truth is that for most dogs, the crate provides a secure area where they feel safe and protected. Crate training is also a great method to lead your pet right into house training.
Does Crate Training Dogs Work?
www.obediencetrainingfordogsblog.com
A dog crate is a cage made of wire or molded plastic. The purpose of crate training dogs is to provide confinement for reasons of security, safety, housebreaking, protection of household goods, travel or illness. You may think that putting your pet in a crate is mean or inhumane and might cause your pet to resent you or to be psychologically damaged. However, dogs view the world differently than people.
Why does he look so sad? FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Have you seen the commercial on TV where the little boy proudly shows his mom the neat trick ‘Toby’ has learned with mom looking horrified as the dog scoots his rear end on her nice, clean carpet? If you didn’t understand why she was so upset, read on.
by Sarah Stroud, January 7, 2010
Richmond Pet Care Examiner
You are a dog owner, and you have noticed that your beloved pet is scooting his hind end on the floor. You are concerned, could this be a sign of worms? That is usually the pet owner’s first thought. There is usually not a concern there. The root of the problem is what is called anal glands.
For decades, hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people have been unexpectedly stepping in wet, cold puddles of dog urine, as a result of not understanding what it really takes to house train a puppy.
I'm So Sorry!
It’s frustrating as hell, ruins your socks, and stains your carpet. But it doesn’t have to be that way any longer. All you need is the right dog training information, a string, and a little bell, and your dog won’t mess on your floor ever again.
I house trained my golden retriever puppy below to ring a bell to go potty at 11 weeks!
Hundreds of dog training experts are teaching techniques like how to use crates to build bladder strength, and increase the length of time between eliminations; grinding your dog’s face in his poo to teach him it’s not OK, or methods even as intricate as getting a dog to go in a kitty litter box. And while all these techniques can work, they all have one major flaw…
… they all rely on your dog to hold his bladder for hours on end, until you finally remember that you should let him outside to go potty. This is fighting an uphill battle with your dog, because it is infinitely easier to teach an animal to DO something than it is to teach an animal to NOT do something.
Meaning that if we could find a way for our dog to tell us he has to go to the bathroom, that would be much easier than training him to NOT go to the bathroom
Here’s a few more examples to show you what I mean…
Read the rest of this entry »

Would you like to be able to TRUST that your dog won’t piss all over your house?
Have you tried scolding him, or rubbing your dog’s nose in his own pee when you catch him… and it just doesn’t seem to be working?
If that sounds like you, then you’re going to LOVE these 3 FREE potty training tips that you can use to fix your dog’s potty training problems once and for all.
Each of these tips are crucial to follow if you ever want your dog to be TRULY potty trained.
Dogs have a natural instinct and desire to NOT piss on themselves or their territory. This is why you see so many dog trainers talk about why you should crate train your dog.
I call this desire to not eliminate on themselves or their territory, the “Rental Car” mindset. The “Rental Car Mindset states that we always treat things we consider to be our own, better then we treat things that we are merely renting, or don’t consider to be our own.
This certainly is a simple way to think about whether your dog is potty trained, or is NOT potty trained. If he’s potty trained, then you’ve effectively shown him that your home is his territory and, if you haven’t potty trained your dog, you’ll want to follow the exercises below to help teach him to respect his territory.
A very simple example of the Rental Car Mindset at work is when you see dog trainers talk about crate training.
Crate training a dog forces the dog to live in a space for a long period of time without peeing in it, because dogs don’t like peeing on themselves. And when a dog lives in a space long enough without peeing in it, and is also shown WHERE to pee once he leaves “his” space, you end up with a dog who understands where he can and can NOT pee.
But most experts who teach you this technique are leaving out a big part of the story.
Simply crate training your dog is NOT enough to effectively potty train your dog.
In order to effectively potty train your dog you need to take the same concept that crate training uses to teach the dog that a crate is his OWN space, and apply it to larger rooms of your house.
This is where the concept of Earning Room Rights comes into play.
When I say Earning Room Rights, I’m talking about a process of confining an un-potty trained dog to one small room, and helping him understand that that particular room is not to be eliminated in until he fully grasps that concept.
Once the dog has fully mastered the art of holding his bladder in this first room that room is now Pee Proof, then and only then do we slowly give the dog the opportunities to earn the rights to additional rooms.
Thus the name, Earning Room Rights
Most of my clients who struggle potty training their dogs are making one of these 3 Pee Proofing mistakes.
Mistake #1: Focusing on more then one room, or one space at a time
Never forget that potty training dogs is done one room at a time.
Start teaching your dog how to be potty trained by picking one room of your home and confining your dog to that space with gates. I personally like to pick a heavily trafficked room that has a door leading outside
Pee Odors Are Harder To Remove From Carpet. Start potty training in rooms with harder surfaces.
To some dogs carpet is a bulls-eye just waiting to be shot at. So to help make your potty training job easier, just avoid carpet altogether if you can.
Mistake #2: Failure to do Temptation Testing
If your dog seems to be holding his bladder in his one isolated room for hours at a time, even when you leave him unsupervised, don’t think your work is done.
As I mentioned before, many dogs have certain surfaces that they prefer to pee on, or certain objects like stuffed animals.
When I was potty training my Golden Retriever, Bauer, he would behave perfectly on linoleum, but had a hard time resisting the urge to go on the carpet.
So I felt that before Bauer had earned the right to have access to carpeted rooms, he needed to undergo some carpet Tempatation Testing.
Temptation Testing is simply taking the types of surfaces, or objects that your dog likes to pee on and puting them into the gated off room that you’ve been Pee Proofing.
Tempt your dog to pee on slabs of carpet before introducing to carpeted rooms
In the case of my Golden Retriever, I noticed that if I left him unsupervised with a slab of carpet in his room, he would pee on it.
Knowing he couldn’t pass this Temptation Test saved me lots of messy clean ups, because if my dog couldn’t resist the urge to pee on one single slab of carpet in an entirely linoleum covered room, then he hadn’t Earned The Rights to carpeted rooms.
If your dog has the same kind of problem, this is the point where you want to train him that if he has to go, there is an EASIER and more rewarding way to go to the bathroom INSTEAD of peeing on the carpet.
This is the point that I like to teach people the “Jingle Bell” technique, which is a technique for teaching your dog to TELL you when he needs to go potty, and earning rewards for doing so.
If you’d like to learn more about the Jingle Bell technique, along with dozens of other potty training strategies, you can find them inside my “Hands Off” dog training course here:
In short, just make sure your dog can pass the Tempations to pee on different objects before you expose him to a new room.
Mistake #3: Only give Partial access to new rooms
Allow dogs to lay on small sections of carpet before giving full access to new room
This technique is pretty straightforward, but ignored by many.
Too many people get their dog’s to stop pissing in one room, and then start thinking their dog is completely potty trained and ready for the whole house.
That ‘aint necissarily so
When you’ve successfully Pee Proofed the first room of your home, and your dog is passing his Temptation Tests don’t just give complete access to a 2nd room of your home.
This new room, hasn’t been lived in by your dog, and is not yet considered his.
In the case of my own dog, when he’d earn the right to gain access to a second room in our home, instead of opening up the entire room to him, I adjusted the baby gates that had previously locked him in our kitchen with , so that they allowed Bauer enough space to come lay down in the second room, but nothing more.
This meant I only allowed him to walk two or three additonal feet into this second room.
This process allows him to be further tempted by the carpeted surface I was letting him onto, as well as slowly spread his scent into that room and start to think of it as his own as well.
As I noticed him continuing to do well, I would slowly open up more and more of the room to him. By the time he had access to the whole room, he’d already filled the room with his scent and taken ownership of it.
If you’ll follow this process, you’ll notice that each additional room your dog earns the right to live in becomes easier and easier to Pee Proof. Just try to resist the urge to give your dog access to the whole house and you’ll find potty training a MUCH simpler process.
Additional Potty Training Tips & Recommended Reading:
If you would like to listen to learn additional tips for how to quickly potty train your dog, you should listen to the Potty Training Interview I did with expert dog trainer, Amanda Brothers.
You’ll receive a free copy of this interview when you order a copy of my Hands Off Dog Training course here:
If you’re interested in dog potty training tips and techniques, then you’re going to like this interview I recently did with Amanda Brothers of SideKickDogTraining.com
A lot of you complained about not being able to download the .mp3 file of my last interview, so I decided to keep it simple and just use the audio player below. As long as you have flash installed on your computer you should be able to play this.
Enjoy!
Chet Womach
P.S. I will not be leaving this recording up for long… it turned out so good that I will be adding it to my “Hands Off” dog training course within the next few days. So if you’re interested in listening to it for free, don’t wait too long
And again…
Please leave your comments on what you thought of this call.