The Complete Dog

House Training A Maltese Puppy Section


 

House Training A Maltese Puppy Navigation


|

The Complete Dog Home Page
Dog Videos
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Dog And Puppy Training Puppies |
Puppy School Training |
Puppy Training 2b Golden Retriever |
Potty Training Your New Puppy |
Training Puppy To Quit Biting |
Shih Tzu Puppy Training |
Puppy House Training Tip |
Training A Labrador Puppy |
Puppy Training Tips Free |
Tips On Training A Puppy |
Puppy Training Nipping |
Schutzhund Training Puppy |
Free Puppy Training Advice |
Potty Training For Puppy Dog |
Potty Puppy Training |

List of Puppy-Training Articles

House Training A Maltese Puppy Best seller

Dog Obedience Trainig
Buy it Now!



Best House Training A Maltese Puppy products

Dog Food Secrets
Buy it Now!

 

Healthy Food For Dogs: Homemade Recipes
Buy it Now!

 

Dove Cresswells Dog Training Online
Buy it Now!

 

How I Trained My Dog In One Evening
Buy it Now!

 

Dog Training Mastery - An Owner's Manual
Buy it Now!

 

D.i.y. Dog Training At Home
Buy it Now!

 

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main House Training A Maltese Puppy sponsors


 



 

Welcome to The Complete Dog

 

House Training A Maltese Puppy Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on House Training A Maltese Puppy. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Avoid Puppy Separation Anxiety

from: The Complete Dog



Since dogs are quite sociable it isn't natural for them to be isolated. However, domestic dogs are going to be left alone from time to, which makes it's important for them to learn to deal with solitude when they're young.

Puppies must be taught to be alone, otherwise problems can arise when they're eventually left by themselves, even if just for a few minutes. Some dogs can be a real problem when they become anxious about being alone and will chew things, scratch at the door, dig at carpets, frantically run, bark, howl, and possibly lose control of their bladder. This can only be prevented by getting your puppy familiar with being alone at an early age, and this especially important if someone in the family usually spends most of the day with him.

Puppies have an ingrained fear of being abandonment by their parent figure, at least until they become mature and more self-reliant. Since you are a substitute for their mother, you must gradually teach your puppy to be independent in the same way it would have happen naturally.

This process should be started as soon as your puppy arrives. The best time is when he's starting to get tired and is settling down for a nap. Play with him a beforehand and take him outside to do his business. When you return, put him in his bed and shut him in the room alone. Puppies tend to feel safer in a den-like area to sleep.

Now your job is to ignore whining, barking or scratching at the door. Eventually he'll accept he's on his own and settle down to sleep. When he's very young, open the door once he's fallen asleep so he can come to you when he wakes up and needs to go out.

This exercise should be repeated often, while gradually building up how much time he spends alone until he's able to easily cope with a few hours of separation. By getting him to cope without you when you're nearby in the house helps him get used to the situation and remain calm when he's left alone.

Never go into the room when a puppy is making a fuss. This will simply be rewarding this behavior, which he'll continue to do. Always hold off entering until your puppy is quiet, and then you can go in and praise this behavior. Enter as soon as there's a quiet moment; leaving your puppy to cry for hours will only serve to make him totally afraid of being left alone. You can start to build up to longer absences, but only go as fast as puppy can deal with.

It's important that you don't punish your dog upon returning from being away regardless of what's happened while you were absense. Your dog simply won't be able to link the punishment with what he's done, and it won't avoid this happening again next time. He'll think you're angry simply because you've returned which will only cause him to be anxious next time you leave him, since he'll now be worried about when you come back and this could lead to separation problems in the future.



Other House Training A Maltese Puppy related Articles

Training Your Puppy Part 1
Keeping Your Puppy Focused
Teaching A Puppy Stand
Controlling A Nipping Biting Puppy
Train Your Puppy To Come And Fetch

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE

This space can be enabled / disabled from your admin panel!

 

House Training A Maltese Puppy News

Ellis teen attacked by dog

ELLIS An Ellis teenager was transported to Hays Medical Center on Friday after allegedly being bitten several times by a pit bull, according to the Ellis police chief.

Read more...