Monday, 26 December 2011

A short review of early puppy training. Part 1

 This is a short review of the early puppy training we have done since Lusi came to live with "THE MEASURES FAMILY." Of course it goes without saying the incredible job Carola Adams and her family at Dutch Kennels did in raising Star's litter of ten puppies, (seven boys and three girls).


Lusi's litter mates at 1 week old
When we arrived to collect Lusi at 8 weeks old, she was ready to explore her new world, beautifully socialized with children and quite accustomed to strangers patting and cuddling her. The 1500km journey from New Brunswick to Ontario went well with Lusi showing little if any anxiousness or stress. 








"Lusi" at 4 weeks old.
Once home, Lusi settled in with Remy, our chihuahua by her side as her constant companion and the other two chihuahuas showing varying degrees of welcome, depending on the situation.








Remy and the "step-over" dog gates!
Getting ready for a puppy: Size does count, sooner or later!
Looking back I can see that I was quite fortunate in having Remy, our chihuahua, join our family early in the New Year of 2011. It had been a long time since we had had a puppy in the house and the decision to take him to puppy classes provided a great grounding in "positive" training methods. It also meant that we had had to puppy proof the house, reconsider "house rules" and go through the process of "house-training" all within the same year as we acquired Lusi. So it was that we were better prepared for a larger breed of dog like Lusi than we might otherwise have been and our puppy training knowledge was more current!


But of course there were some major differences, notably size, that although as an 8 week old puppy these were not immediately obvious, they had certainly become notable by the time Lusi was a few months old.


If you were to ask me what was the single most surprising thing about Lusi I would have to answer, "It was how quickly she grew!" I was sort of prepared for her to grow quickly but I had mis-calculated just how quickly she would become a sizeable dog! Fortunately we had replaced some of those step over dog gates that had worked so well with the chihuahuas, with taller ones, either metal or plastic-mesh retractable ones. I can distinctly remember going through all the online information about dog gates trying to figure out which ones would be the best kind for each location.


Lusi at 7 months old and  
the "jump-over" dog gate!
We opted for a plastic retractable gate in the hallway. It proved to be efficient only in the way it blocked the access for humans...the little dogs learnt how to squeeze under it and Lusi learnt how to jump over it from a standstill.


Fortunately we are always home with our dogs or they are travelling with us, so we were not faced with a serious issue of "containment." Our primary objective was to prevent the dogs from having a complete run of the house and instead to coral them where we spend most of our time anyway.


Gradually Lusi learnt to respect the retractable dog gate and yesterday she waited patiently for us to finish our Christmas festivities without scaling it to join us for "Turkey dinner".

No comments:

Post a Comment