but I don't think the poster's Chi is that young to free feed, he got him
when he was 5 months old already. 
I don't free feed but I do offer mine food every 2 hours or so.  Then again
I am home a lot. 
IMO the best way to housetrain a puppy is to have them on a schedule, take
them out every hour or 2, after a nap and after play until their bladders
can hold.  If you watch when they eat (if you free feed) then you will know
when to take them out.
We do keep Bogie in a restricted area when we can't supervise.  He does both
the pads and outdoors.  However, If I don't pay attention and he has to go
he will go wherever if a pad is not available.  If you don't clean the area
well with a solution that will take the pee odor out then the dog will
continue going to that same spot.  It takes a lot of time and patience..
 
Sheila
 
 
 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Anne
Sent: Saturday, December 09, 2006 8:51 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] Re: Just bought a 1ld 3 oz 11 week old Chi female
how often do I feed?




A chihuahua puppy can and should free feed until they're at least 6 months
or a year old, unless they start putting on a lot of fat.  Chihuahua puppies
very easily become hypoglycemic and should be fed at *least* 3-4 times a
day, preferably more, or, as I said, free fed.  Chihuahua puppies simply do
not have the stomach room to eat enough food to sustain their metabolisms
for more than a few hours.  So yes, I would free feed your chihuahua, and I
would feed it very, very high quality puppy food, such as Innova, which
packs the most possible nutrition into the least quantity, until your puppy
is at least 6 months, preferably a year, old.  Which leads me to part 2.
 
I agree with some of the other comments that your puppy isn't going to be
housebroken by you letting her run unrestrained around the house and
poop/pee everywhere.  If you'll check the Files section of the group's home
page, I have a .txt file there called "paper training" or some such -- check
that out.  When you're not 100% supervising her, your baby needs to be in a
confined area with a pee pad, such as a small bathroom with a baby gate
across the door, or a collapsible playpen.  She can gradually be given more
freedom, i.e. "graduate" to the kitchen or another non-carpeted room) as she
consistently uses the pee pad (if that's what you're using).  Pee pads have
many advantages over newspaper.  For one thing, the plastic backing will
keep urine from soaking through to your carpet.  More importantly, though,
doggy pee pads come with a scent on them that will attract the dog to
eliminate there.  I buy mine on eBay by the 200-count box, that's the
cheapest source I've found.  The important thing, however, is (a) Praise and
reward lavishly for success, and praise for even an attempt at success
(i.e., the first time she actually goes to the pee pad and sniffs it/stands
on it).  (B) Do NOT yell at or otherwise punish the chi for a mistake.  Just
quietly say, "No, that's not where you go," pick her up gently and put her
on her pee pad, then pet and praise her while she's on the pad, whether she
goes further or not, and clean up the floor VERY thoroughly so she won't
have a scent to go back to.
 
You've put her in a situation where she literally does not know what you
want and will not understand at ALL what you're upset about.  Even if you
actually catch her in the act, she'll believe you're yelling at her for
peeing, not for peeing THERE.
 
If you'd like more specific help, just let me know.  You're welcome to
contact me offlist.
 
Thanks,
Anne
 

 

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