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Canine Behavior/dog wetting on floor

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Question
How can I re-train my dog to let me know when he needs to go outside to potty. He is an 8 year old maltese/yorkie. He was my sisters dog and I took him when she passed away. He has always urinated on the floor.

Answer
Hi, Gina,

Thanks for the question.

This is an habitual behavior, which means it will be very difficult to change. Very difficult. For instance, it would be impossible to train him to let you know when he needs to go outside to potty if he doesn't particularly care if he goes inside or outside. If he'd rather go to the bathroom in the house, how can you teach him to let you know he wants to go outdoors? However, there may be SOME things you can do.

Does he have the run of the house, or is he confined to a certain area? Did your sister use newspaper or Wee-Wee Pads? If so, where exactly did she put them? How long has the doggie been living with you? Where does he sleep at night? Where does he like to nap during the day? How much hard vigorous playful exercise does he get every day? Do you play fetch or tug-of-war with him? Does he seem depressed and in shock from losing his "mommy?"

Thanks in advance for your responses.

Lee Charles Kelley
www.LeeCharlesKelley.com
(212) 615-6659
“Changing the World, One Dog at a Time”

Canine Behavior

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Lee Charles Kelley

Expertise

I've been training dogs in New York City for nearly 20 years. My training approach and philosophy are based on the way police dogs, search-and-rescue dogs, and detection dogs are trained--through the prey drive, inherited from the wolf. It's true that there's been a shift away from using the "wolf model" in dog training recently, and to some extent, there's a good reason. That's because trainers have been using the wrong model, the one that says you have to be the "alpha" or the pack leader in order to control your dog's behavior. This simply isn't true. In wild wolves there is no dominance hierarchy, no "alpha" wolf, and no pack leader (not in the traditional sense). The pack instinct only exists to enable wolves to hunt large prey by working in harmony. (Wolves who live near garbage dumps, for example, and who don't hunt together, don't form packs.) So if wolves don't have an instinct to "follow the pack leader" or "obey the alpha wolf," how could dogs have inherited it from them?

Years ago, before I became a dog trainer, I noticed that the happiest, most obedient, and best-behaved dogs I met weren't the ones who'd been to a dog trainer or behaviorist; they were the dogs whose owners always had Frisbees and tennis balls on hand. And while it might seem that my approach would only be relevant to high-drive dogs who love fetch and tug-of-war, it isn't. Even something as seemingly unrelated as a housebreaking issue or greeting behavior are often the direct result of a dog's predatory energy not having an acceptable outlet.

All behavior is an expression of energy. So when a dog's energy isn't utilized in a way that feels satisfying to his or her instincts and emotions, that's when behavioral problems develop. Giving the dog an acceptable outlet for its energy will almost always bring the dog's behavior back into alignment with its instincts

Feel free to ask me questions about any training/behavioral issue.

LCK

Experience

20 years as a dog trainer. I'm also a bestselling author, writing a series of dog-related mystery novels for Avon.

Organizations
Dog Writers Association of America

Education/Credentials
Just a natural gift I have for understanding and training dogs

Past/Present Clients
Too numerous to mention.

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