In my experience tibetan terriers are very stubborn and if you train her I would be amazed when you start takin her out she will wee outside and hopefully get used to it good look and hope you like aggressive little dogs. By the way just wanted to add that I wasn't being funny when i said the aggressive bit its just that they were supposedly bred as indoor guard dogs and therefore they are aggressiveIs there anyone who can advise me/ I have a 12 week tibetan terrier ***** who i am finding hard to housetrain.
I've never seen the point of training pads or newspaper. Using them, you are training the dog to go indoors, then retraining it to go outdoors.
Go back to basics, take her outside at regular intervals (at least every 2 hours. Stay with her until she goes, then praise her to the skies. Take her out after she has eaten, as soon as she wakes up and after she has been playing.
There is also the possibility that she has a urinary infection, it's unusual for a dog to wee in its bed - it might be worth having her checked out by the vet.
She will get the hang of it eventually!
Pop along to your local petstore and buy some 'Housebreaking Spray' I used this with my Pointer pup. Spray it in the area/pads you want your dog to use in the house, gradually moving the paper nearer the door, and then spray in an area outside. The dog will soon get used to using this area, I used this spray with my pup and he was housetrained within two weeks. ( those pads are a great idea too....they don't smell!!)
forget the pads,sounds like shes confused as to whats a pee pad.pitch the beds she smells the pee,u need to wash the floor and eveything she peed on with enzyme cleaner from the petstore.at 3 months she can only hold it for 3 hours.how often do u let her out?4months old = 4hours etc.start training for outside if possible and treat her the second shes done.
At 12 weeks, your dog is a little young to be expecting a trained dog. Most often, a dog younger than 4 months is just physically unable to be housetrained. You should be working hard at it, just don't expect miracles. I agree with the previous posters...get rid of the pee pads and start crate training. I don't like the idea of teaching dogs to pee in the house, and I think it sends confusing messages to the dog. Read up on crate training, and keep it up...she's nearly at an age where you can expect to see some progress, I wouldn't mess that chance up with potty pads.
Watch or control the water intake, when they drink take them straight outside.
Try crate training as they should P where they sleep.
Rubbing their noses in it, saying NO then dragging them outside, dont forget when it goes outside to praise the dog.
Good luck.
if all else fails there are doggy daipers o nthe market.
trust me this really works.when ever your doggie does its buiness you should rub its nose in it, tell it off and send it to its bed.i khow it sounds cruel but it pays off really well.im sure this will help you.
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