Find your perfect puppy at Champdogs
The UK's leading pedigree dog breeder website for over 25 years
> The worst time is when he's woken up from a sleep, he instantly start whimpering.
>
> By going back in when he starts to whimper, aren't you teaching him that whimpering brings you back?
>
> Don't feel hard on your self for ignoring him, if he got into the habit of requesting and getting your attention when it suited him you may end up in trouble a few years down the line, play time, cuddle time, training time, food time should all stop/start on your terms not his
> He will be telling you that he needs to relieve himself. How else can he?
>
> think it would be better to follow the steps you are but to acctually leave the house for a while mornings and afternoons and leave pup completly alone
> but the mornings from 7.30 till 12.30 is a long time for a baby puppy
> I wish you good luck and hope your commitment is steadfast, in your case dog ownership is in many ways harder than for others
> You can expect to come home to a mess !
> Do you have someone who could pop in for a few weeks to break up the day ?
> creche for the mornings, it will help with socialisation aswell
> they said that as long as he is going to be crate trained then he'll be fine
>We leave him in the kitchen from 7.30 so we can have showers etc and for this time he's totally fine. I'm then with him again once I'm ready until I leave for work at 9am.
> you've had some very honest responses
> If you're prepared to make sacrifices financially you may be able to improve the situation by reducing your working hours substantially or employing a dog sitter/walker daily
> I hope this info is taken as trying to help, not judge or criticise, but nevertheless a necessary wake up call to the serious responsibilities of correctly looking after a baby puppy
> Do you take him out in the garden to pee and poo before you leave?
>
>
> If you're using puppy pads housetraining will take a very very long time
> I spoke to the breeder about this long before we picked him up and also long before we all agreed that this little guy was going to come home with us and they said that as long as he is going to be crate trained then he'll be fine.
>> You can expect to come home to a mess !
> I fully expected this, so it's not a problem.
>He ignores him for the first 10 minutes and then takes him out to the garden and they play.
> I do feel you have been very ill advised by this breeder and I also feel you may find it even harder with this particular breed. My sister bought a boxer many years ago at a time when she was going back to university so she was probably left for less hours than you are planning. The poor thing destoyed her home and then, when she tried with desperate measure of taking her with her all day in the car, she destroyed the inside of that and burnt out two wiper motors.
> Was this the breeder that was happy for you to have two puppies?
> Nor am I sure what you mean by house training properly when he is older. Now is the time to do it and how will you manage it any better when he is older if you are still working full time?
>
> I will, howeverr, go and speak to one of my elderly neighbours about popping in on him mid-morning while he is young and see what she says.
> Littlemissdrago you will have to ensure he really does get enough of YOUR time when you're at home, in the morning, at lunch and in the evening, regardless of whether you actually feel like doing it or not, and regardless of the weather, and you'll have to be consistent and relatively hard about ignoring him, and if he DOES pee or pooh indoors you must realise it's not his fault so don't be cross with him, simply clear up with one of the sprays that get rid of the scent and forget it, but I believe there is no reason at all why this should not work and you end up with a priceless family member.
> By 9 weeks he would sit at the door to ask to go out
> I will, howeverr, go and speak to one of my elderly neighbours about popping in on him mid-morning while he is young and see what she says.
>
> "a boxer is a large lump of moving muscle".
> I think the key thing to remeber when leaving a dog at home is to make sure they have had a good long walk in the morning
>when he is old enough to hold it for three hours then we will re-toilet train home outdoors
> when leaving a dog at home is to make sure they have had a good long walk in the morning
> instead of jumping down her throat
>working 3 hours in the morning
>I'm sure the OP will find a routine that works.
> Being left for three hours at a time is perfectly acceptable (possible not ideal at a young age though).
> This is no different to if the OP got a neighbour/friend/relative to come in and let the dog out for a wee and maybe spend 10 minutes playing with him.
>A lot of people that work full time do this!
> First and foremost, it is a bit late now saying a boxer was not a good choice etc etc, isnt that shutting the door after the horse has bolted?? Instead could we not give the OP the best advice possible instead of jumping down her throat when she says she is already a little upset.
> we should be helping her
Powered by mwForum 2.29.6 © 1999-2015 Markus Wichitill