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Paper Training Your Dog: How To
Do It And Common Problems
Paper
training is a specific form of house training for your dog:
you’re teaching her where in the house is appropriate for her
to eliminate (pee or poop). When you paper train your dog, you teach
her to only eliminate on newspapers (chosen for their absorbency, ready
availability, and cheap cost) which you gather up and throw away after
each use
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What’s
paper training?
Paper
training is a specific form of house training for your dog:
you’re teaching her where in the house is appropriate for her
to eliminate (pee or poop). When you paper train your dog, you teach
her to only eliminate on newspapers (chosen for their absorbency, ready
availability, and cheap cost) which you gather up and throw away after
each use.
What
options other than paper training do I have for my dog’s
house training?
There are
two ways of effectively, efficiently, and rapidly house training your
dog. Paper training is one; the other is something called crate
training.
Crate
training is based on a dog’s basic dislike of soiling where
she sleeps, and involves restricting the dog’s movement (by
putting her in a crate, or small indoor kennel) whenever she cannot be
actively supervised.
The
difference between crate training and house training?
Paper
training and crate training aren’t the same thing. Crate
training is where you train your dog to only go outside; paper training
is where you train your dog to only go on newspapers.
You cannot
train your dog to do both at the same time – the two are
mutually exclusive. She’ll get confused, and you’ll
only prolong the training process.
You can
choose to use paper training as an intermediary step for eventually
only eliminating outside (although not everyone recommends this:
it’s easier on the dog, and more effective all round, to
choose one method and stick with it.)
Why should
I choose paper training instead of crate training?
Crate
training and paper training are both effective ways to house train your
dog.
In general,
it’s accepted (by most dog trainers and vets) that crate
training is the fastest method of house training your dog; but it
requires a considerable investment of time and effort, which is not an
option for everyone.
Paper
training is the best option for you if:
- You
don’t have easy access to a yard (for example, you live in a
hi-rise apartment block)
-
It’s not easy for you to take your dog outside for any other
reason (for example, elderly or unwell people)
- You have
a full-time job, or other time-consuming commitment which
can’t be got around (meaning that you’re not able
to spend the large amounts of time supervising your dog that crate
training requires)
-
You’re planning on training your dog to go outside the house
eventually, but not just yet (for example, it’s the dead of
winter with four-foot snow drifts outside)
Crate
training is the best option for you if:
- You have
a medium to big dog
- You are
able to spend a lot of time during your puppy’s first weeks
of house training in actively supervising her, and are available during
the day to let her out of the crate at two- or three-hour intervals
- You want
to train your dog to go outside the house right from the start
Paper
training isn’t suitable for all dogs: it really only works
for small males and small-to-medium females, since a dog larger than
these just produces too much waste for the newspaper (and you!) to
handle.
How
to
paper train your dog?
First, pick
a convenient area of the house for your dog to use as the elimination
area. Because she’s going to be peeing and pooping in this
area, it’s best if you can choose somewhere without carpet:
most people choose a corner of the kitchen or laundry (since these
rooms usually have tiled or linoleum floors, making hygiene a
non-issue.)
Spread
newspaper thickly in a corner of this room. At first, you’ll
need to make the newspaper area pretty big, since your pup has no idea
that she’s meant to go on the paper at all.
To make
sure that she’s able to eliminate only on the paper,
you’ll either need to restrict her movements to the papered
area of the floor (which you can do by erecting barriers to keep her in
– if the room you’ve chosen is large or busy, this
is probably the most user-friendly option for you), or paper the whole
floor (which is a viable option if the paper-room is small and
there’s not much thoroughfare.)
At first,
your puppy will eliminate pretty much at random on the paper.
It’s important for the paper-training process that she only
gets to go on the paper – you need her to form a strong
association between the feeling of paper under her toes, and relieving
herself.
After a
week or two, you can begin to shrink the papered area of the floor,
allowing her more access to unpapered surfaces (leave the barriers
where they are for now so she doesn’t get the chance to
eliminate anywhere else.)
Do this
gradually, a couple of sheets at a time. If you’ve given her
enough time to get used to the paper, she should naturally restrict her
elimination areas as the papered area shrinks.
NOTE: If at
any time she begins to eliminate off the paper, then increase the size
of the papered floor surface to the size it was when she was still
eliminating only on the paper, and give her more time to get used to it
before beginning to reduce the papered area again.
There’s
no need to panic: this doesn’t mean that the paper training
isn’t working, it just means you’re moving a bit
too fast for your puppy’s capabilities.
Most dogs
take a couple of months (eight to twelve weeks) to get used to the
paper training method. Until she’s reliably going on the
papers only, you should restrict her access to the rest of the house
unless you’re actively supervising her- which means 100% of
your attention is focused on the pup.
In general,
a good rule of thumb is that your puppy is confined to the papered area
unless she’s sleeping, eating, or being played with/actively
supervised.
Things
you
should do are
- Praise
her effusively whenever you see her eliminating on the paper. Wait 'til
she’s done (so you don’t distract her!) and praise
her, pet her, and give her a treat.
- If you
catch her in the act of eliminating off-paper, this is actually a great
opportunity for training development. Interrupt her with a clap, loud
verbalization (“Ah-ah-aaaah!”), or slap your open
palm loudly on the wall. This will startle her – in most
cases, she’ll actually stop mid-toilet and hunch down. Scoop
her up immediately and put her on the paper. When she finishes, praise
her hugely and give her a treat.
- If you
come across an accident after the fact (a wet spot or pile on the
unpapered floor), you’ve missed your window of opportunity to
teach her not to do this. You can’t tell her off in this
case, because she won’t understand what she’s done
wrong; all you can do is clean it up and supervise her more carefully.
If this is happening a lot, you’ve given her too much freedom
in the house and not enough supervision: restrict her access to the
unpapered floor, and step up the supervision.
- Feed her
at specific, scheduled times (for example, a meal at 8 am, 1 pm, and 7
pm) to encourage her to develop an “elimination
timetable”.
For further
information on house training your dog, including a detailed look at
paper training and crate training, check out The Ultimate House
Training Guide.
It’s
the complete dog-house-training guide. The Ultimate House Training
Guide and comes highly recommended.
Ultimate
House Training Guide
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