Tuesday, March 31, 2015

15. Toilet training your puppy Case 1/10


TOILET TRAINING PUPPY IN THE CITY - How to train your new puppy to pee and poop in the correct way

Dr Sing Kong Yuen
www.toapayohvets.com
 

Case 1/10  
First written; June 28, 2005
Updated:  April 1, 2015

"Not a visitor for the whole day," Janet, the pet shop girl in her early 20s, wiped her nose with the tissue paper said to me when I vaccinated her 3 puppies at 5 p.m. She was licensed to sell puppies by the veterinary authority but she has 4 puppies for sale compared to more than 20 from the competitor down the road.

It was Tuesday, June 28, 2005, the second day of the school term for students going to school including the junior colleges. Had Singapore slided into an economic recession? Yet the well-stocked established competitor down the road had several prospective buyers when I was there a few minutes ago to vaccinate the puppies.

A part-timer, a muscular young man in an orange sleeveless T-shirt, a student studying Chemical Engineering was surfing wirelessly on his note book. "Did you tap on the cafe's broad band," I asked him as the pet shop's policy was to prevent no broadband access to discourage malingering. Several young adults of around 20 years old are employed by the pet shop as part-time to clean the puppy cages and do sales of puppies and accessories. However, they loved to surf the internet, chat and post on message boards like www.friendstar.com, neglecting the prospective buyers..

The working hours are long from 10 am to 10 pm and the shop opens seven days a week. It is physically tiring. "Why don't you write a book on puppy toilet training just for your puppy buyers during your free time?" I asked the fair complexion pet shop girl who was the sister of the proprietor of the shop. "Many of them have no clues as to what to do after buying the puppy from the pet shop. If you give or sell them a book on the Singaporean situation, they will remember you as no other pet shop bothers to do such a book."

She shook her head. The flu viruses had drained her soul. "Have you got good antibiotics for me?" she sniffed and rubbed her red nose. "Some good ones you use for your puppy's kennel cough. Or for cat flu." I asked her to seek proper human medical attention. She said, "My doctor's medicine are ineffective."

"You should be at home resting," I advised. "Antibiotics are ineffective against the flu viruses." Her obligations as a proprietor must be fulfilled as the shop must have at least one operator at any one time so as not to close the shop and losing business.

She then explained to me how to toilet train the puppy. "Good hands-on experience is needed," she had advised the buyer verbally. Don't ask her to write a book  even if that would help her increase sales. There are better things to do in life when you are twenty-something. She is typical of the young adults. In any case, most young adults do not like writing or reading. 

"If the puppy buyer can afford to pay $50.00, I will recommend the grated crate for small breeds like the Shih Tzu. This crate has a pee tray below the grate. The urine and stools drop through the gaps in the grated floor onto the pee tray, keeping the puppy clean.

"The newspapers on the pee tray cannot be shredded by the puppy. The tiled floor of the house or apartment will not be soiled as the pee-tray traps the puppy's waste. In addition, the walls of the pee-tray will not collapse on an active puppy, unlike the 4 fences forming a play pen or puppy pen."
Many puppy owners buy the cheaper 4 panels of fencing to form a playpen to enclose the new puppy. The cost could be $30.00.  The pet shop girl sold a puppy and the crate while I was at the shop. I snapped an  image as shown below. 


To toilet train the puppy, take it out from the crate to smell the newspaper placed outside the crate. A house-breaking solution bought from the pet shop is sprayed on the newspaper. The puppy is supposed to pee and poop on the newspaper after smelling this solution.

That is the theory behind the sale of the product. Some new puppy owners find it not effective. A better alternative, in my opinion, is to wet the newspapers with the puppy's own urine. The newspapers outside the crate and the crate must also be enclosed to prevent the puppy roaming around the whole apartment. A good location will ht be the guest bathroom, usually found beside the kitchen in many apartments.

The puppy should be confined, that is, housed in this manner for around 4 weeks so that it learns the proper way to pee and poop.  Most Singaporean puppy owners let the puppy roam the whole apartment. The puppy pees and poops everywhere, hence the owner becomes a failure in toilet-training the new puppy.    


See my 2015 Youtube video advising a new Chihuahua owner at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2doRBL6rL8&feature=youtu.be

How many first-time puppy buyers in Singapore inn 2005 have knowledge of toilet training? Not many as compared to 2015 where such knowledge can be found in the internet.

In the past years, a puppy gets
beaten up every time it soils the whole apartment. After several beatings, a seem to know where the owner wants it to pee and poop, but this negative reinforcement method of training is not recommended as it is said to be puppy abuse.
Who actually looks after the puppy at home? It may be the domestic worker or the mother who is not present when the puppy is purchased. So, the poor puppy does not get properly trained as there is no "instruction manual" unlike buying a camera. There are many puppy books available nowadays but the toilet-training topic is usually not covered in detail.

Original blog on June 28, 2005:
http://sinpets.blogspot.sg/2005/06/educating-puppy-buyer-in-writing.html
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Thursday, March 19, 2015

How to toilet-train a puppy in Singapore

481. Book contents



Toilet Training Your First Puppy in Singapore

1. Purpose
What's in it for the reader?
How to do it successfully?  Productivity

Chapter
1. What
2  When. Puppyhood. Clean slate.


3.  Who.  One owner. CONFLICTS Multiple owners. Child, toddler, Parents. Grandparents
Consistency, Perseverance, Patience, Knowledge of dog behaviour, human behaviour, child behaviour.

4.  Where.
     Kitchen tiled file. Plastic sheet, tray under newspapers
Situations, Tools, Equipment, Floor feeling,

5.  Why
6.  How

History of puppies accommodation, Age of dogs etc. interconnected. Positive and negative reinforecement travel. Rewards - food, play, fun.



7.  Success stories
8.  Failure stories
9.
10.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015