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Monday, June 1, 2009

Dog Behavior - Excitement Urination

Have you ever come home and your puppy or dog was standing in the yard or at the door just happily waiting to greet you? Such a nice feeling that is … except when he is so excited, he begins to pee on your shoe or on your nice hardwood floor. This is called Excitement Urination.


Excitement Urination

Excitement urination is a fairly common occurrence among dogs, so there is no need to be alarmed if your pet pooch dribbles away happily whenever he is excited. It is caused by lack of bladder control and is more often seen in puppies, especially when they get overly excited. However, it is not uncommon in adult dogs too.


When and How it Happens

Excitement urination usually occurs during greetings and sometimes at play time. You may notice that every time you return home, your dog tends to dribble urine while jumping up to greet you. This is not a problem behavior.

Dogs get so excited to be greeted by humans, that they temporarily lose control of their bladder and urinate. Excitement urination in puppies is a result of nothing more than just infant muscles that are still too young to have any self-control. The bladder muscles have yet to be trained. Most puppies will outgrow this problem as their muscles get stronger and they gain control of their muscles.

In older dogs, this is mostly because no steps were taken to stop it and it has simply become a habit. This has nothing to do with housebreaking. Excitement urination can happen even in dogs that are otherwise perfectly toilet trained.

You should be able to differentiate between excitement urination and submission urination.

Excitement urination is accompanied by a lot of tail-wagging and joyful barking, whereas submission urination will be accompanied by a lowered head and the dog will usually have his tail between his legs.


What not to do when faced with excitement urination

Having this happen everyday can be very annoying and tiring. However, keep in mind that this is normal and your puppy may not even be aware that he is urinating. Excitement urination is just a passing puppy phase and will eventually stop if the right steps are taken at the right time.

What not to do when faced with the problem of excitement urination:

  • Do not get angry with your puppy - Your puppy is not aware that he is doing anything wrong. Even when he does, he may be much too young to control it. Shouting at him for something that he cannot do anything about will create other problems and could even lead to submission urination later on.

  • Do not just shrug it off as just a passing phase - You need to take active steps to stop it. Though most puppies eventually outgrow this phase, some do not. If your puppy is not aware that there is something wrong, he may see no need to change his behavior. Also, the longer it goes on, the harder it will be to break the habit later. A little pup dribbling urine may be a mere annoyance, but still tolerable. A full-grown dog urinating can be a downright nuisance and your guests are not likely to like you or your dog.

  • Do not excite your pup - Excitement urination is induced by excitement. So it is extremely important that you do not unnecessarily excite your pup, at least until he has gained some control over this behavior. Don’t contribute to the situation by greeting him exuberantly when you get home. Don’t use that I am ‘so-glad-to-see-you-too’ voice. Tone down your greeting and stay calm and avoid all eye contact.

6:22 pm edt          Comments


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Monday, August 18, 2008

Been Awhile

Well I have a little time, so I figured I would write a little. Been pretty busy, we have installed quite a few Underground Pet Fence around here lately. Lets see, we have been in Strongsville, Medina, East Cleveland, Akron, Canton, Solon, North Royleton, Elyria, and Olmstead, to name a few. I have been working with a GoldenDoodle also, here in Solon. Honey is her name and she is a real sweety, but a little to active for the older couple who has her as she is only a year and a half old. While we have her on an Electronic Fence to contain her, she is just to powerful for the couple, So she and they are getting a crash course in Obedience training. What is interesting of course is that like most Pet Dog Owners, they don't see the value in it, so paying for it was out. So what I have done is just incorperate, the SIT command into the Electric Fence training, and also have instructed them in the proper use of the Prong Collar. So far it seems to be working as they and I have seen a very rapid decrease in her hyperactivity and unrulyness. I also have them making her sit, anytime she goes through a door way with them, getting in and out of the car, etc. The husband, reaaly did not think it would work, but he is seing the value in it now. The wife is thrilled to death, that she can now walk her and not be pulled all over the place. Honey is a very good dog, but I really think she is to much for them right now. BUT I think with the proper structure in place she will work out fine. Well thats about it for today. Will write more tomorrow about another dog (Mini Schnauzer) that I am working with.

Monday 1 Sept 2008

Picking the right dog

This is probably my biggest pet peave in all of dogdom land. I have visited many a house/family to do a Underground pet fence estimate or even to do Dog Training and have seen the below over and over again. The family has just adopted a new puppy, we will say 9 -10 weeks old and the puppy is already running the household and running amuck, mouthing the kids, chewing on everything, peeing and pooping everywhere ect, you get the picture. So immediately the puppy is deemed a BAD PUPPY that can't be controlled, the young child is scared of him, and has received scratches, and the puppy normally ends up either in the back yard on a long lead, or in a crate most of the time.

So what I am going to do here is to address the mouthing and then in other posts I will address the other issue's, in fact if you go to our website www.containapetneohio.com and look in the training tips page you will see some tips to help with the other issues. Anyway back to the subject. So why do puppies mouth? Stop and think about it and look at it as if the puppy is a baby. Babys explore everything with their mouths, and I mean everything goes in their mouths, puppies are the same way. BUT puppies when they are in a pack enviroment, if they get to rough get either a YELP from their victum or a warning nip. Well unfortunatly we can't and should nip a puppy back, but we can YELP if they hurt us. So one fo the things you can do and have your child do is to yell OUCH every time the puppy mouths you or your child.

Another thing you need to make sure you do is to give your puppy LOTS of chew toys to chew on as they also teeth when they are young.

The next puppy training technique is to remove your attention every time the puppy mouths you. Make sure you don't look at the puppy also, attention to a dog includes eye contact. As far as the kids go tell them to cross their arms and stare at the ceiling when the puppy mouths them. Ignore the puppy for about 30 seconds as by that time they have aleary moved on to the next thing. Pushing the puppy away will not help as this will turn into a game with your puppy.

Yelping in many puppy training cases will tell the puppy exactly what you want - that it hurts when he/she does that. doing this and also removing your attention should get rid of the mouthing problem. Of course some puppies will become excited by this yelp and bite harder - if that happens, don't use this puppy training method.

So What if those don't work

Another training technique is using a little lemon juice or bitter apple on your hands. When the puppy mouths you, they won't like the taste. Or you can teach him something else to do like teaching him/her to lick on the cue "no bite". To do this put a treat in your hand, when your puppy licks, give him the treat and say "no bite". they will learn this puppy training lesson fast.

The link below goes into teaching your puppy to be soft mouthed which can also help.

http://www.deesdogs.com/documents/teachingbiteinhibition.pdf

Well that is it for now, if anyone would like to comment or send me an email on the subject, please feel free to. my email address is bob@containapetneohio.com.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Dog training - House training your puppy

Okay in the previous blog I addressed the mouthing issue. In this one I will address house training. I run into this quite a bit when I go and do an estimate for a Contain A Pet underground fence. The folks have gotten a new puppy, or have adopted a new dog from a shelter etc., you get the picture. So they have this new dog and this guy/girl is peeing and or pooping all over the place in the house, so they ask me what to do. The first thing I say to do is to crate the dog when it is not under immediate supervision, this means when you are not with the dog and keeping an eye on it. Next thing to do, is 15 minutes after it eats, take it outside, if it goes, then bring it back in and crate it back up, unless you are going to work with it or play with it. If it does not go, then crate it back up for 15 minutes, after 15 minutes take it back outside. Keep this up until it goes and then back in the crate it goes. What you are doing is establishing a pattern for the dog, and you are identifying the time it takes to digest its food. This gives you a baseline on when the dog needs to go outside and go pee/poop. Do this until you have that baseline established, and then use the base line to determine when the dog needs to go outside. At all times though, keep an eye on the dog, and if he starts sniffing the floor, circling an area, grab him and outside he goes, hopefully he goes poop/pee. If not crate him for 15 minutes and back out he goes.
Keep in mind that puppies have a very hard time holding/controlling their functions until around 5-6 months. That said, some puppies house train right away, while others it takes awhile. The same goes for adult dogs, some take to it right away, others take awhile.
One thing to make sure of, is to get a crate that is just big enough for the dog, to big a crate and the dog will soil it, but as a rule, dogs will not soil there bedding/crate. Also keep in mind YOU CAN'T leave a dog crated all day and then expect it not to soil its crate. Alot of dogs, just can't hold it for 8-10 hours
Above all, remember its persistence that works doing this, house training does not happen over night. In fact I trained a pug for a client, that took 6 weeks before he got it, and he still will go in the house, if the client does not stick to his routine. Which means, they get up at 6AM and Jake (the pug) goes out for 15 minutes, then they feed Jake and 25 minutes later Jake goes out again. Then they have to make sure that he goes out every 4 hours until the night feeding when 25 minutes after he eats, he goes out again. Then at 9:30 PM he goes out again.
He is very religious about it, but he knows when he has to go, and while he does give warning signals, they are very sutile and if you don't catch it, well the worst happens

I hope this helps folks and that is all for now
Bob

Contain-A-Pet of North East Ohio should not be confused with Invisible Fence ® or Invisible Fencing ® which are products and registered trademarks of Invisible Fence, Inc.

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