Dog Training Q and A! 1/14/2021: On why it can be useful to teach a dog to go in a bag




How To Train Your Dog With Love And Science - Dog Training with Annie Grossman, School For The Dogs show

Summary: <p>This is a bonus episode: A recording of a live Q and A.</p> <p>Join Annie Grossman for a live Q and A most Thursdays.</p> <p>Sign up for the next one at <a href="http://schoolforthedogs.com/qanda" rel="ugc noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">http://schoolforthedogs.com/qanda</a>.</p> <p>Here, Annie answers two questions, and offers a similar suggestion to help deal with both issues: Train a dog to go in a bag! </p> <p><a href="%20https://storeforthedogs.com/collections/backpacks">K9 Sport Sack </a><a href="%20https://storeforthedogs.com/collections/backpacks">Dog backpacks:</a> https://storeforthedogs.com/collections/backpacks</p> <p><a href="https://amzn.to/3p8bhPm">Boat and Tote: </a>https://amzn.to/3p8bhPm</p> <p>---<br> Partial Transcript</p> <p>Annie:</p> <p>Thank you for joining me folks. I have two questions here that were submitted.  As always, you can join me for these Q and A sessions live in two places, either in the new School for the Dogs app, which is free and you can get there by looking up School for the Dogs community in the app store or play store, or going to schoolforthedogs.com/community.  Or you can join me in webinar format schoolforthedogs.com/QandA. And you can submit a question in advance as some people have done here at anniegrossman.com/ask.</p> <p>So two questions this week and they have a common thread in my answers. First one is regarding Wilson who's currently a School for the Dogs puppy student, and is very excited for prep school at School for the Dogs which is starting next month after graduating from puppy kindergarten.  He's very rarely had an accident in our apartment, but given that he was still getting used to going downstairs, upstairs not being a problem, we've always carried him outside to eliminate. We thought we were golden saying, okay, once we made it outside and treating right after he eliminated.</p> <p>Wilson's much more confident walking down stairs now, however.  We're in a fourth floor, walk-up in New York City.  On foot, he's having about a 50-50 success rate holding his bladder until we get all the way downstairs and out the two front doors.  Any tips for how we can help him out because he is getting heavy?  They also note that he is eating puppy kibble and and treats.  His high value treats are freeze dried duck and boiled chicken.</p> <p>So I think a 50, 50% rate and nearly a hundred percent success rate of getting this puppy to pee and poop outside is actually pretty good. So thumbs up to you guys. Zach and Molly, Wilson’s people.</p> <p>So this is behavior that [inaudible] anything else can be shaking him down 90% of the way, and then letting him walk the last 10% of the way. And if you can have success with that, without him going during that last 10% of the way outside then start carrying him down 85% of the way.  And let him walk the last 15% of the way.</p> <p>Two other tips, you know, he’s still a puppy. His bladder is gonna get stronger, he’s still developing. So, it’s possible that the excitement of going out combined with his puppy-ish young bladder isn’t quite ready to handle being able to go all the way down. But again, you can help him build this behavior, the behavior of holding it, little by little.</p> <p>And certainly if you get outside and he has not peed or pooped, you would, should reward that behavior. I mean, being outside might be a reward in and of itself, but sure. Why not also give it a treat, give him a treat.</p> <p>Full Transcript available at <a href="https://www.schoolforthedogs.com/podcasts/episode-113-dog-training-q-and-a-1-14-2021-on-why-it-can-be-useful-to-teach-a-dog-to-go-in-a-bag/">SchoolfortheDogs.com/Podcast</a></p>