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wees & poops in the garden have been rewarded by a biscuit
.) - it was obvious he wanted the reward as the moment I came downstairs he'd run to his biscuit tub in the kitchen. I never rewarded him for this, simply cleaned up the poop and went back to bed, but that went on for about a week before he gave in (being woken at 4am becasue the dogs done a steamer in the livingroom and expects to be 'paid' for it was wearing thin!!!)
> Do you have a word you use to get him to pee when you ask or do you just treat for peeing?
He's good at pretending to wee to get a biccy, but he doesn't realise the tell-tale sign- his tail goes up in the air, level with his back, when he's weeing, it stays hanging down when he's faking, LOL
> Sorry its rambly its hard explaining your thoughts on the internet sometimes
> what are you washing the bedding with?
> Whether it is habit, marking or thinking he will get a treat it will break the circle of his thought process if he is to go outside at 3-4am.
(self employed - if we have to stay up half the night to meet deadline then we must)
, he has had an extra wee at different times, the 'latest' being 5 am. Got back up at 7:30 and he'd peed his bed.> I only ever use treats during the very early stages of training until a dog understands the meaning of a command he knows what wee wee means so IMO the treats need to stop altogether anyway
> What would happen if you put one of those puppy pads outside?
(washing allready in the machine, left the peed bedding outside untill I could put it in the machine)
, he's walked past the bedding to wee on the grass.>The one constant is that when you are there he controls his bladder, when you are not he does not bother- therein must lie the clue. It seems that the 'problems' start at bedtime when he is suddenly reluctant to go out, he needs treats, he doesn't quite seem to understand what you want him to do....having managed it all during the day. Of course, this whole bedtime ritual precedes you going away upstairs for the night
(I was having to lay nearly on top of him and force him off the sofa with my body - tried tipping him off, but he's too heavy for that
). >For the period you slept downstairs with him- after a few days was he going outside more readily at night?
(thinking he'll always wee in the house whatever I do, so not putting in much effort to stop it).
> No treats, not even for a wee on command?
>
> Nope!
> No treats, not even for a wee on command?
>
> Nope! :-)
>
>
> I just use my normal, non-boi washing liquid, I've tried bio too but that makes no difference.
>
> He does know what 'wee-wee' means, I am sure of that, but there really is a battle of wills at night over it. He is very 'stubborn' in so much as he will not do something he does not want to do if he sees no reason for it (hence the use of lots of treats - to try to make it a rewarding thing to wee), on top of this he is very, very lazy.
> I wonder if it is habit, seperation anxiety or a blend of them. do you have a videocamera you can set up sneakily to see what he does before hand? of example is he shows other anxious behaviours maybe?
will take another day or 2 to get sorted as we decided to do some re-decorating at the same time
), but a major plus point is seeing how contented Buster looks when he's snuggled up to me on the sofa and not waking up to wee :)
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