Hi Ann,
Oh of course only positive!  We have the file you wrote actually in 
his folder in my bedroom that was a HUGE help.  He does great on the 
pee pee pads when we are home.  Just when i am not home is the 
problem.  He is eating 2 a day.  He eat Puppy Wellness.  I was told 
it was one of the best natural foods with no by product. I was using 
Science Diet when we first got him but he was not going for hours. 

I will try to make his area larger by placing him in the kitchen 
tomorrow and put more toys in there for him to play with.  I will 
try the KONG i have at home. I ll keep you posted.  Thanks so much 
for the tips!!!


Noelle















--- In [email protected], "AnneL" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> A couple suggestions.
> 
> First, regarding potty training in general, you might check out my 
file, housebreaking.txt, in the files section of the group's 
homepage.  It may contain some tips you can use.  I strongly, 
strongly suggest positive reinforcement ONLY.
> 
> Second, you might try *washable* potty pads instead of 
disposables.  They're more work, but your baby can't tear them up 
nearly so easily.
> 
> Third, it sounds to me like Eddie is getting pretty darned bored.  
I don't know the size of your kennel, how long he's being left 
alone, etc., but a chihuahua, particularly a puppy, confined to a 
small space for hours on end IS going to get bored, restless and 
probably very destructive.  If I were you, I'd strongly consider 
using baby gates to confine him to a larger space, perhaps a tile-
floored kitchen.  Stock the space with *plenty* of his favorite 
toys, and leave a TV or radio on.  Check out the Kong toys that have 
a cavity in the middle where treats, peanut butter, etc. can be used 
as a filler to keep him entertained for a while.  What you really 
need is someone to check in on him at least once during the day, 
change his pee pads and play with him for a while.  If you start 
crating him for so long every day, he'll start eliminating in his 
crate, having no choice in the matter, and that will badly undermine 
his pee pad training -- plus, you'll have to clean the waste out of 
his bedding and, probably, off of HIM instead of the floor.
> 
> The other thing that concerns me is the poop tracking.  It sounds 
to me like his poop must be pretty soft, if he can track it around.  
Pardon the question, but is Eddie having diarrhea or rather liquid-y 
poops?  They should be solid and decently firm, and therefore very 
difficult to "track" around.
> 
> If you feed Eddie a very, very high-quality dry food, such as 
Innova EVO, he'll poop less frequently and they'll be more solid and 
smaller.  Cheaper foods contain grains as a filler.  Chihuahuas 
digest grains very poorly, and grain-filled foods will cause much 
more frequent, much softer stools.  If a chihuahua's stools aren't 
firm enough, the anal glands are not expressed when the chihuahua 
eliminates.  The anal glands can become blocked and impacted, 
requiring a vet or groomer to express them.  So there's a few good 
reasons right there to perhaps movie Eddie to a high-quality grain-
free food.
> 
> Anne
> 
> 
> 
>   ----- Original Message ----- 
>   From: Stefanie Brannan 
>   To: [email protected] 
>   Sent: Monday, March 26, 2007 11:09 AM
>   Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] hlpe running out of ideas
> 
> 
>   Hi Noelle.  Maybe you could try just plain newspaper instead of 
the wee pads.  My Chi, Cricket doesn't chew her wee pads, so I guess 
I am lucky in that aspect.  Maybe Eddie would be less likely to tear 
up paper than wee pads.  As far as stepping in the poop, I don't 
think there is much you can do about it since you aren't home to 
clean it up before he steps in it.  Maybe he will grow out of 
stepping in his poop as he gets older.  Or, maybe you could expand 
his space so he has more room.  For instance, put a baby gate up in 
the kitchen so he has the whole kitchen.  And put the wee pads or 
paper on one side and his toys, bed and food/water dishes on the 
other.  I guess this would depend on the size/shape of your kitchen, 
but that is what I would try.  I, personally,  wouldn't crate him 
for a full work day unless you hire a pet sitter to come during the 
day while you're gone.  You should never crate a dog for more than 4 
hours at a time.
> 
>   Stef
> 
>   noellebachand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>     Eddie is about 5 months now and is doing well on his wee wee 
pads. i 
>     work full time during the day so when i got him i decided not 
to crate 
>     him. i got him a nice kennel and put his wee wee pads in, 
blanket, 
>     bone. He is fine when he is in it, but he will poop and then 
walk in it 
>     and get it all over the palce or shred them to pieces. i just 
dont 
>     understand. I am tired of cleaning it and i cant yell at him 
because i 
>     have no idea what time of the day it happened and plus he is 
sooo cute 
>     when i get home from work. Should i start crating him??? What 
is my 
>     next step? I have tried the litter box with litter, litter box 
with 
>     wee wee pads. i have even taped them to the ground. He doesnt 
care he 
>     goes and then walks in it and i have to clean it when i get 
home. We 
>     say he likes to do the cha cha. Any tips would be so great. 
thanks
>     Noelle
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------
>   Don't pick lemons.
>   See all the new 2007 cars at Yahoo! Autos.
>




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