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Puppy Training: The Ultimate Guide to Housebreak Your Puppy in Just 7 Days
Puppy Training: The Ultimate Guide to Housebreak Your Puppy in Just 7 Days
Puppy Training: The Ultimate Guide to Housebreak Your Puppy in Just 7 Days
Ebook58 pages45 minutes

Puppy Training: The Ultimate Guide to Housebreak Your Puppy in Just 7 Days

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Is your new puppy making your house into a disaster area?


Tired of the smell, the cleaning bills, and the frustration of housebreaking a puppy through trial and error?


Well say goodbye to the mess—your obedient, housebroken pet can be yours in just 7 days!


There’s nothing quite as frustrating as struggling to housebreak a new puppy.


It’s by far the most annoying, least fulfilling part of pet ownership. The housebreaking process causes stress that makes life harder and strains the owner–pet relationship.


To say nothing of the expense! Paying to have your furniture or carpets cleaned, and if things get too badly soiled they might just have to be thrown away.


What if you didn’t have to go through with unexpected accidents or soiled carpets? What if you could have a housebroken, obedient puppy in only one short week?


That’s exactly what Peter Williams offers in his simple yet comprehensive Puppy Training: The Ultimate Guide to Housebreak Your Puppy in Just 7 Days!


Built on a foundation of rock-solid animal training research and the latest insights into canine psychology, Peter Williams’ incredible step-by-step method will fix your housebreaking problem in no time.


Puppies are simple creatures. Once you understand their needs and desires, and how they communicate these, you’ll be well equipped to give them what they need while communicating your own household potty rules to your new pet. All through an easy, fun method that can be done in a week or less.


By the time you’ve finished reading Puppy Training, you’ll have mastered:


The elementary dog psychology you won’t be able to train your pooch without (pg. 8)


Four basic steps to introducing your puppy to crate training (pg. 14).


How to set an accident-free toilet routine right from the start (pg. 18).


Everything you ever need to know about simple, stress-free positive reinforcement (pg. 24).


Pro dog trainers’ secret insights into unlocking your dog’s innate intelligence for more obedience and better companionship (pg. 29).


The fourteen simple dos of getting your dog settled into acceptable bathroom behavior (pg. 33).


What to do if your dog has an accident…to make sure it doesn’t happen again! (pg. 40)


The easiest method yet to teach your puppy the most important commands they’ll ever learn (pg. 49).


How to avoid the ten most common mistakes most dog owners make when training their puppy (pg. 54).


An easy and fun approach to housebreaking your dog with the least amount of mess (pg. 58).


And much, much more!


A housebroken puppy makes for a happy puppy…and a happy home.


So don’t waste your time or possessions while you figure out what works and what doesn’t. Learn to speak your dog’s language on the first try with Puppy Training.


Owning a puppy doesn’t have to mean living in a filthy home. Click “Add to Cart” now to take your first step toward a clean, obedient animal companion!

LanguageEnglish
PublisherEric J Scott
Release dateNov 18, 2018
Puppy Training: The Ultimate Guide to Housebreak Your Puppy in Just 7 Days
Author

Peter Williams

Peter A Williams is Professor of Polymer and Colloid Chemistry and Director of the Centre for Water Soluble Polymers at the North East Wales Institute. Has published over 170 scientific papers and edited over 30 books. He is Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Food Hydrocolloids. His research is in the area of physicochemical characterisation, solution properties and interfacial behaviour of both natural and synthetic polymers. Recent work has been involved with the determination of molecular mass distribution using flow field flow fractionation coupled to light scattering, rheological behaviour of polymer solutions and gels, associative and segregative interaction of polysaccharides, development of polysaccharide-protein complexes as novel emulsifiers.

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    Puppy Training - Peter Williams

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    Introduction

    Fact: Your puppy is capable of holding their bladder for a maximum of 1-hour for every month of their age. Theoretically, a puppy that is two months old can hold their bladder for up to two hours. After the two-hour mark, an accident is going to happen, it is just a matter of when. Despite this fact, you have to realize that not all puppies are created equal. Bladder control varies based on several factors. Studies show a bigger puppy has the capacity to hold their bladder longer than a small dog.

    A good rule to live by when you adopt a new puppy is this: for a puppy 1 to 2 months of age, expect your dog to hold their bladder for 30 to 45 minutes. When your puppy reaches 3 months you should see an increase of ability to hold their bladder. The time frame is anywhere from 1.5 hours to 2 hours. It is only when your puppy has reached 4 months that the long standing fact of 1-hour per month of age starts to hold true.

    The studies that led to these facts are very important, when you begin your 7-day journey towards housebreaking your new puppy. You will only succeed in housetraining your puppy, when you have successfully understood your puppy’s physical abilities and the cognitive ability.

    The number one mistake, dog owners make with their new puppies, is to misunderstand a puppy’s behavior. This misunderstanding leads to negative discipline, as well as wrongful accusations.

    Let’s put something into perspective.

    When you were born you could not hold your bladder. In fact, you took until you reached the near age of 2 years old before you were cognitively capable of being toilet trained. Around 14 months, some children understand there is a need to go and even know where to go, but they are usually incapable of making it to the toilet quickly enough. Even while you are being toilet trained as a toddler, you have to wear a diaper because of accidents. Up to age eight or nine, you can be experiencing accidents because you get too busy playing and forget to go to the bathroom.

    Now, let’s consider a puppy. You are asking your puppy to be housetrained in 7 days. You are asking a puppy that does not have hands to open doors to hold its bladder and pee/defecate in proper places. Your puppy depends on you, just as you depended on your parents to see to your needs. You needed your parents to be aware of the limitations your tiny body had when you were an infant and toddler.

    Can you reasonably ask a puppy to do something that you were incapable of? The answer is no. You have to be able to adjust your life to your puppy and realize the limitations they will have in the first few months.

    Positive rewards for good behavior are imperative. It is just as imperative that you do not reprimand your puppy or give in to their behavior. If you can keep in mind that your puppy depends on you for everything, including proper housetraining, then you will succeed in teaching your puppy where they can and cannot go to the bathroom.

    © Copyright 2016 by Peter Williams - All rights reserved.

    This document is geared towards providing exact and reliable information in regards to the topic and issue covered. The publication is sold with the idea that the publisher is not required to render accounting, officially permitted, or otherwise, qualified services. If advice is necessary, legal or professional, a practiced individual in the profession should be ordered.

    - From a Declaration of Principles which was accepted and approved equally by a Committee of the American Bar Association and a Committee of Publishers and Associations.

    In no way

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