|
||||||
When dogs relieve themselves on fire hydrants, carpet, and even their owner's bed or clothing, it may have nothing to do with house training.
An unhappy dog owner discusses her young rescued terrier, “He is fully house trained and up until now we've had no problems. However over the last week he has peed on our bed…” Another dog owner laments his female Lhasa Apso, “…she's peeing on the bed, we had thought maybe she was mad at us but even when we are home and give her more attention she will do it and it is getting worse…” These problems indicate that dog owners are puzzled but really want to understand what their pet is trying to communicate to them. Medical or Behavioral?Inappropriate urination can sometimes indicate a urinary tract infection or some other disease causing frequent urination, increased water intake due to hot weather, or simply having to wait too long to go outside. Any of these can cause accidents. In some cases, the behavior can become a habit even after the problem is solved. Other accidents may be due to excitement, submissiveness, or a relapse in house training. However, some dogs, in the form of urine marking, place their ‘signature’ and add personal touches to territory or property they perceive to be theirs, in the hopes that outsiders will stay away. In order to understand this better, think of an occupied house displaying neat flower beds, yard ornaments and likely having a deed or contract with signature to back it all up. Strangers know that this house is home to someone and will, hopefully, respect it as such. Dominant dogs, both male and female, may mark large areas such as the entire park where they take walks. Others may mark only their yard or the doorway to the home or even just their owners' clothing or bed. When a dog who is reliably potty trained begins leaving doggy graffiti all over the house, there are likely some territorial issues going on. Perhaps it could be compared to the building of urban privacy fences that are not seen on sprawling ranches.
What to Do:
What Not to Do:
Related Reading:
The copyright of the article Dogs Urinate in Weird Places in Dog Training is owned by Joy Butler. Permission to republish Dogs Urinate in Weird Places in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||