GREETING WEE
Have you ever been
so-oo happy to see
someone that you’ve
weed yourself
a little?
No, dei nitely not
me either!
However, some
puppies get so
overexcited to
see their family or
visitors that their
little immature
urinary sphincters
just cannot hold on,
and they unwittingly
wee as they say
‘hello’. Some pups get
so excited that they
run around the house
in glee, leaving a trail
of urine for you to
clear up.
The good news
is, as the puppy’s
sphincter gets
stronger with age,
the behaviour
usually improves. If
you have an overly
excitable greeter,
make sure visitors
meet the dog initially
outside, and keep
greetings pleasant
and kind but low-key,
to limit that
over-arousal.
&
Q A
AM I MISSING
SOMETHING?
Dear S teve,
Q
I recently brought a new
puppy into our home,
a 10-week-old collie X Cocker
Spaniel. I haven’t pad trained
him, because I wanted to avoid
rewarding him for going inside.
He’s pooing outside regularly
— he’s only done it inside
twice, and that was in his crate
overnight. However, he doesn’t
show any signs that he needs to
wee. I take him out every hour
he’s awake. I’m sure he knows
he needs to go outside, because
he’ll go within seconds of being
let out, but he won’t ask to be let
outside and he won’t show signs
he needs to go either (no snii ng,
circling, pacing, or whining),
he’ll just squat and go. I know he
won’t have full control until 20
weeks, but is there something I’m
missing? Thanks for any help!
Your Dog reader, on Facebook.
Steve says: It sounds like you’re
doing a great job; at 10 weeks,
your puppy is still such a baby
so continue with your patience
and consistency.
As time goes by and your
puppy builds a stronger history
of receiving rewards for toileting
outside, then the motivation to
head outside will grow stronger,
and he’ll be more motivated to let
you know he wants to go outside
to earn the rewards!
Over the next few weeks,
rather than ‘on the hour, every
hour’, start taking your puppy
outside after sleep, play, visitors,
excitement, and then last thing at
night. You’ll then be lengthening
the time between outside visits,
which in turn will encourage your
puppy to let you know if he does
actually need to go outside.
Body language from a puppy
can be very subtle at i rst, but
as you get to see your puppy in
more and more locations and
situations, I’m sure you’ll become
more l uent in the ‘words’ he uses
to communicate with you. The
more he knows you’ll respond to
his body language, the ‘louder’
that body language will become.
● Employ good control and management via your puppy pen
to avoid ‘mistakes’.
● Heavily praise and reinforce toileting in the ‘correct’ area.
● NEVER punish or rub your puppy’s nose in ‘it’. You wouldn’t
rub a dirty nappy in a toddler’s face!
● Be consistent, be disciplined, and appreciate your job is
to help this baby dog. No matter how valuable your carpet
is, I guarantee it will never be as valuable as the life and
relationship you’ll have with your dog.
TOP TIPS!
MY
PUPPY!
problem
Steve
’
s
SUBMISSIVE
URINATION
Sometimes known as an
appeasement behaviour, this
is when the puppy may lack
coni dence or is a little fearful
of the human they are being
greeted by.
As already mentioned, this is
a perfectly normal behaviour, and
with maturity and a development
in coni dence, the problem
behaviour will usually extinguish
over time.
To help accelerate the process,
always look to develop the
puppy’s coni dence in people and
new environments.
In the short term, try these tips:
● Greet your puppy in an area
such as the garden or an area
where, if mistakes do happen, it’s
not the end of the world.
● Appreciate it’s not the
puppy’s fault; he genuinely
cannot help it.
● As ever, avoid the temptation
to tell him of or punish him as
this will only make him more
frightened and submissive next
time, which will exacerbate
the problem.
● Keep greetings as gentle as
possible. Crouch down, and let
pup come to you. A tickle under
the chin is far better than a big
scary hand reaching over the
puppy’s head.
● Be aware of your own body
language; be small, be sideways,
and be slinky. Don’t lean over
or stare directly at the puppy;
instead divert your eyes and face
to the side and let puppy set the
pace by coming to you.
The use of positive
reinforcement training,
and the development of trust and
relationships within the family
home, will help improve and
eliminate the submissive
urination over time, but, as with
all problems, if it persists contact
a good trainer or vet.
50 Your Dog May 2019
Don’t tell your pup
of ; he can’t help it!
“Look to develop the
puppy’s coni dence
in people and new
environments.”
‘OTHER’ TOILETING ISSUES
46-48 YD Puppy Problems CS(SW)ok.indd 50 26/03/2019 09:40