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Housetraining On The Go (1)

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Housetraining On The Go (1)

Perhaps your dog is already housetrained but have you taken this training one step further? In other words, is he smart enough to take that knowledge with him while traveling away from home?

The answer is mainly up to you and how you teach your dog to behave when you go places together. You might assume dogs would be able to generalize at-home potty manners to all indoor environments but they usually need some guidance to put it all together.

Potty On Cue

To direct your dog to eliminate at rest stops and other places when you're traveling, you'll need a way to let him know when it's time, and the place to potty. This will be easy if you teach your dog to go potty “on cue.”

Pick a word or phrase to use whenever you take your dog to a potty area. Choose something you won't be embarrassed to say out loud around strangers because you'll be using it at rest areas, parks and other public places where other people (and children) may be accompanying.

Some suggestions for cues are “go potty”, “get busy”, “hurry up”, or “eliminate”. Pick one cue and stick with it so your dog will learn that it always means the same thing.

It's easiest to teach the potty cue first at home where your dog is used to eliminating and there aren't a lot of new sights, smells and sounds to distract him. Take your dog to his potty area, then say the potty cue in a casual and friendly voice.

Just say it once. You can repeat it after a minute if he hasn't gone by then. When he relieves himself, praise him quietly and calmly so he stays relaxed in case he needs to potty a bit more.

Be careful not to sound impatient or commanding when you say the potty cue; that might make your dog nervous and tense, and he won't be able to go. Also, don't repeat the cue too frequently; that may distract your dog from the task at hand, causing him to take more time to get his business done.

Your dog won't automatically know what you mean when you say the potty cue at first, so you'll need to use it many times. If you go with your dog to his potty area each time he needs to eliminate, you'll have plenty of opportunities to practice the potty cue. It will also get your dog use to doing his business with you standing nearby, which is another travel skill that will come in very useful.
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BONUS : Housetraining On The Go (2)

When you are away from home with your dog and taking an outside potty break, keep him leashed any time he needs to potty near traffic or in unfenced areas. Some dogs like privacy, though, and are hesitant to eliminate if someone is standing near them.

Getting Your Dog Used To Pottying On-Leash

Home is the easiest place to start teaching your dog how to potty while being leashed. Home is usually where dogs feel most comfortable doing their business, so teach on-leash elimination there first.

Leash your dog when it's potty time, and take him to the area you want him to use for elimination. A 6-footer or retractable leash is best, as it allows you to stand a short distance away from your dog. Give the leash enough slack so that your dog doesn't feel pressure on his collar. This way, he won't feel crowded or restricted, and will be able to relax and relieve himself.

In a calm, friendly voice, say your dog's potty cue (a word that you command to remind him that it's potty time, such as “Go Potty”). Then, just wait while he sniffs around and picks the perfect spot. When he goes, praise him quietly and warmly, saying the potty cue as part of the praise phrase.

After your dog is comfortable eliminating at home while you hold his leash, take the show on the road. Start with on-leash walks that begin from home. Walk around your neighborhood or go to a dog-friendly park. This will let your dog smell where other dogs have been and will be a good way to introduce him to pottying when and where you suggest.

Potty In Public

Most adult dogs or older pups will eliminate wherever they smell other dogs' pee or poop. Some dogs, however, actually try to avoid relieving themselves where they smell the scent of dogs they don't know. This happens mainly with pups younger than 4 months old and dogs that are fearful or submissive around other dogs. These dogs don't feel safe or comfortable eliminating where strange dogs have marked.

Staking claims on territory by marking the perimeters and prominent landscape features with urine and feces is a natural, instinctive canine behavior. In canine society, dog's don't urinate over another dog's mark unless they consider themselves of equal or greater rank.

In nature, it's dangerous for a pup to wander far enough from the den to smell urine marks left by unknown dogs. A pup away from his home territory knowns he's out of his element and isn't inclined to leave his scent where strange dogs will find it. Instinct apparently tells pups it's safe to dot hat, because a puppy's urine scent will let other animals know that he's young and vulnerable.

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