> Yes, you are expecting a lot, she is only 10 weeks old!! <br />Puppies bladders are tiny so she will not be able to hold herself for long. Not knowing how your puppy was kept but I suspect she would have been with the rest of the litter in a large play pen, where they would relive themselves when they wanted. <br />It will happen in time but you will have to be patient..slightly different scenario but how long are babies in nappies for..just to give you an idea <img class="fsm fsm_wink" src="/images/epx.png" title="wink" alt="
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I couldn't agree more with this answer. At this age your very young puppy hasn't the faintest idea about what you want, yet. Leaving aside the fact that she probably can't physically hold yet. Put yourself where she's come from ...... 'I need to urinate/have a BM so, wey-hey, just go'. What you must not do is try to correct her after the act. Loads of praise when YOU take her outside, regularly and at recognisable times during the day (especially immediately after waking), and she empties. Correct ONLY in the act but don't shout or scare her or she'll run off, and clean up mistakes which there will always be - how many will depend on how good you are at training - without comment. She will be watching and see your body language. Mine were on newspaper, up the end of the whelping box which was made up of 2 4 X 4 sections, the second added when the litter was up and moving around so they moved from the sleeping section, to the other end to empty. My puppy buyers tended to tell me that being used to going on newspaper meant if they laid some at the door to the outside (when closed), that's where their puppies would head.
When/if you can't supervise, use a crate to confine her - as much to keep her out of danger and mischief as anything but don't leave her in there for hours (1-2 hours is long enough by day, making sure she's emptied just before being crated) - this way she should have no need to empty in her crate and will start to learn to hold, knowing you'll be there to let her out before she needs to 'go'. If when you take her out, she doesn't empty within say 5 minutes, bring her back in but instead of letting her have the run of the house, confine her to the room by the outside door and stay with her. The moment she squats, circles, say No! (calmly not shouting) and carry her back outside. And you will, for now, have to get up once overnight to take her out. But that won't be forever!
This is going to take time, consistency and a load of patience but eventually you'll have a puppy who will be clean indoors - probably by 4 months.