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WHAT IS CRATE TRAINING
By © Gwen Bohnenkamp
Crate training is one of the most
efficient and effective ways to train a dog. The single most important
aspect of dog and puppy training is that you reward and praise your
dog or puppy each and every time she does the right thing. For example:
praise her when she chews her own toys instead of the couch or eliminates
outside instead of in the house. The more time you spend with your
puppy or dog, the quicker and easier it will be to train her.
The key to house training is to
establish a routine that increases the chances that your dog will
eliminate in the right place in your presence, so that she can be
praised and rewarded; and decreases the chances that your dog will
eliminate in the wrong place so that she will not develop bad habits.
It is important
that you make provisions for your dog when you are not home.
Until your dog is housetrained, she should not be allowed free run
of your house. Otherwise, she will develop a habit of leaving piles
and puddles anywhere and everywhere. Confine her to a small area
such as a kitchen, bathroom or utility room that has water/stain
resistant floors. Confinement is NOT
crate training.
What is crate Training?
Crate training can be an efficient
and effective way to house train a dog. Dogs do not like to soil
their resting/sleeping quarters if given adequate opportunity to
eliminate elsewhere. Temporarily confining your dog to a small area
strongly inhibits the tendency to urinate and defecate. However,
there is still a far more important aspect of crate training.
If your dog does not eliminate
while she is confined, then she will need to eliminate when she
is released, i.e., she eliminates when you are present to reward
and praise her.
Be sure to understand
the difference between temporarily confining your dog to a crate
and long term confinement when you are not home. The major
purpose of confinement when your are not home is to restrict mistakes
to a small protected area. The purpose of crate training is quite
the opposite. Short term confinement to a crate is intended to inhibit
your dog from eliminating when confined, so that she will want to
eliminate when released from confinement and taken to an appropriate
area. Crate training also helps teach your dog to have bladder and
bowel control. Instead of going whenever she feels like it, she
learns to hold it and go at convenient scheduled times.
| Crate
training should not be abused, otherwise the problem will get
drastically worse. The crate is not intended as a place to lock
up the dog and forget her for extended periods of time. If your
dog soils her crate because you left her there too long, the
house training process will be set back several weeks, if not
months. |
Your dog should only be
confined to a crate when you are at home. Except at night,
give your dog an opportunity to relieve herself every hour. Each
time you let her out, put her on leash and immediately take her
outside. Once outside, give her about three to five minutes to produce.
If she does not eliminate within the allotted time period, simply
return her to her crate. If she does perform, then immediately reward
her with praise, food treats, affection, play, an extended walk
and permission to run around and play in your house for a couple
of hours. For young pups, after 45 minutes to an hour, take her
to her toilet area again. Never give your dog free run of your home
unless you know without a doubt that her bowels and bladder are
empty.
During this crate training
procedure, keep a diary of when your dog eliminates. If
you have her on a regular feeding schedule, she should soon adopt
a corresponding elimination schedule. Once you know what time of
day she usually needs to eliminate, you can begin taking her out
only at those times instead of every hour. After she has eliminated,
she can have free, but supervised, run of your house. About one
hour before she needs to eliminate (as calculated by your diary)
put her in her crate. This will prevent her from going earlier than
you had planned. With your consistency and abundance of rewards
and praise for eliminating outside, she will become more reliable
about holding it until you take her out. Then the amount of time
you confine her before her scheduled outing can be reduced, then
eliminated.
Mistakes and
Accidents During Training
If you ever find an accident
in the house, just clean it up. Do not punish your dog.
All this means is that you have given her unsupervised access to
your house too soon. Until she can be trusted, don't give her unsupervised
free run of your house. If mistakes and accidents occur, it is best
to go back to the crate training. You need to more accurately predict
when your dog needs to eliminate and she needs more time to develop
bladder and bowel control.
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Gwen Bohnenkamp has
been providing behavior consultation and training services since
1985. She instructed the first university level course in Applied
Animal Behavior at San Francisco State University. Gwen established
and directed the largest and most comprehensive animal behavior
correction program in the US at the San Francisco SPCA. Her program
served as a model for humane organizations. Gwen also owned and
operated Perfect Paws, Inc. in San Francisco and was vice-president
of the Center for Applied Animal Behavior in Berkeley, CA. Gwen
Bohnenkamp is the author of Manners for the Modern Dog, From the
Cat's Point of View and Help! My Dog Has an Attitude.©
Copyright 2005 Gwen Bohnenkamp, All Rights Reserved. This
article reprinted by permission from the Publisher. For more of
Gwen's articles, please visit www.perfectpaws.com.
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