House Training Your German Shepherd Puppy
When house training your puppy you are the teacher and
the success of your lesson depends on your time, patience, commitment,
consistency and understanding of the task ahead. Below are some helpful
suggestions for training your German Shepherd, Dutch Shepherd, or Belgian Malinois puppy.
Building upon the natural instinct of a puppy not to
soil in a place where they sleep, it is a good decision to crate train
at the same time you housetrain. They go hand in hand and make this
experience less stressful.
Begin training every day when the puppy wakes up.
Immediately take it outside to an area you want it to eliminate in. As
soon as you put the puppy down, start repeating a phrase you will
continue to use consistently - like "Hurry, hurry" or
"Take a break". The minute puppy starts to do the deed, lavish
it with praise, remembering to say "Good Hurry: or "Good
Break".
You can count on the puppy needing to go outside to
eliminate first thing in the morning, immediately or within 20 minutes
of a nap, after chewing on a bone, after 2 to 3 hours of being confined
to the crate and just before bed. This is a demanding schedule, but well
worth your efforts to make it happen.
It is highly recommended that you avoid paper training
your puppy. It gives the confusing signal that it is OK to go potty in
the house and it is OK to go potty on things on the floor.
Although it is your goal to prevent accidents, they are
bound to happen. When they do, never hit your puppy with a
rolled up newspaper, never shove your puppy's nose into
the mess and never scream at him or her. If you are lucky enough
to catch the puppy in the act, quickly and calmly pick it up and take it
outside. Lavish praise only if the puppy goes outside.
Sticking to a regular feeding and watering schedule
greatly enhances your success with your new puppy. Remember to remove any access to food or
water by at least 7:30 at night. An ounce of prevention goes a long way.
Observe closely your puppy's body language when it
eliminates outside. After a while you will become skilled at reading
cues like suddenly stopping play for no apparent reason, frantically
circling, and sniffing the ground as indicators that the puppy has to go
outside quickly. It's potty time! Anticipating is half the battle.
Paper towel and an enzyme cleaner are needed to
thoroughly clean up any accidents in the house. Do not use vinegar, club
soda or ammonia to clean up accidents. These only draw your puppy back
to its mistakes.