In fairness I had been warned. Google told me to expect potty training “your
new puppy” to take up to 6 months with the odd accident after that. I vaguely remember being told never to use Google;
it’ll have you dead in a half hour. Then
I was told by two people that they potty trained their dogs in about three
days. Yes! Something I can identify with. My kids were the same!!! All house trained in about the same time
frame. I can work with that! So the first couple of days were nothing
short of a shit fest. I may as well be
honest about it. We knew our Juno was a
lady puppy and if there were any doubts at all that she wasn’t a bitch, the
morning after we brought her home, only proved it. We closed the sitting room door on her and
retired for the night. I lay there in
the dark and listened to the new baby howl and whine for a good twenty
minutes. But I didn’t get up to
her. Well, all the best baby trainers
out there say you have to let them Cry It Out if you want to be the one in
control, if you want your life back and not let the baby, sorry, animal, think
they are the boss. All the best baby trainers out there are wrong! This lady puppy got her own back fair and
square on her new owners for the overnight abandonment. There were mountains of steaming objections
on the floor. Three of them if I
remember correctly. And as if to drive
her point home, lots of little puddles.
Even the lads weren’t this bad on their first day of house
training. But it was only the first night and Juno is damned cute, lucky for her, so I cleaned up the messes with just
a touch of bad grace and gave her breakfast.
The boys were great, Screecher Creature No. 1 in particular. No sooner had the puppy woken up from her many,
many, many naps, (Jeebus, puppies
sleep a lot!) and went on her little
drunken, stumbling walk, he scooped her up and out to the garden where we
watched and waited until wee’s were forthcoming. I swear Katie Taylor didn’t get such a
thunderous reaction on her return home. And
then it happened. The first time Juno
woke up and went outside to relieve herself.
With no scooping up, no crazed, panicked shouts of “Get the dog! Get the dog!
She’s awake!” and no watching her like a hawk to see when she would
squat. I was thrilled. There Google!
Take that! You were wrong. It does only take three days. Ish.
The accidents started to slow down.
Even the night time ones. In our
house the chances of a Lego injury are slim.
It could happen, but it’s unlikely as the Screecher Creatures are
terrified of the Bin Monster, their mother in clever disguise. Forget about a ILI (Identified Lego Injury)
you are more likely to step in a warm puddle on a midnight trip to the bathroom
with a sleepy three year old than walk on a lumpy bit of Lego. But now a little problem. There is a smell of shit about the place and
I’m darned if I can find it. The lads
are all big huge massive fans of being in their bare feet so it’s not on their
shoes. The house has been hidden under a
fug of Karvol for the last two days thanks to Screecher Creature No. 4 having a
rotten summer cold. And I fear up to
now, the Karvol has disguised the shitty smell. So it could be anywhere! Juno
has also copped on to the fact that we have under floor heating. She ain’t no fool dog and is mighty fond of
her creature comforts already. She has
searched for and found her favourite hot spots in the house. That’s fine but stay the heck out of mine and
Mister Husband’s bedroom. I do not want
to do a Tom Cruise skid across the floor courtesy of a doggy doo present. The fact that the floor is hot also means the
turd dries out in no time but leaves
a stain if not caught quickly. And a
smell. I cannot find the
turd!!!!!!! It is driving me insane. House training three boys was never this hard
despite all of my misgivings. I’m sure
it will turn up, these things generally do.
But now we’ve just been put on a gale force warning alert. The last few days in general haven’t been
very good weather wise and as a result the back door is closed a lot. Juno cannot get out to relieve herself and
hasn’t learned the art of whining.
Whining and yelping when a 16 month old sits on you for shits and
giggles does not count so my question is:
how do you potty train a puppy in weather like this? There has been a complete, 100% reversal in
the potty training today. It was an
absolute wash-out of a disaster. There were
little Mi Wadi coloured puddles everywhere!
And I mean everywhere! If I hear,
“Oh look, Mammy, Juno is doing her wee’s” one more time, I’ll piss on the floor
myself out of temper. If you can’t beat
‘em, join ‘em.
Things I’ve learned since getting a dog: # I
thought Mister Husband was the only living being that could fell an elephant at
10 paces by farting. I was wrong. Dogs
are pretty foul too. # I heard somewhere
sometime that dogs dream. Juno’s eyes
play Saturday Night Fever when she’s asleep and she also yelps in a 70’s
rhythm. # If it’s not tied down, puppies will have a go at it; “it” could be a
shoe, a child’s ankle, foot or hand. Even a seated toddler’s ear. Our puppy likes skirting boards. # Puppies have no shame or taste buds. They can’t have – any creature that spends
that much time cleaning their parts
just can’t have. # Puppies get the hic-coughs.
# They grow at a freakishly rapid rate.
It’s lovely having a floppy puppy running down the hall to greet
you. Not fun I’d imagine when she’s a
full grown black lab. # They have a sly trick of looking all cute and puppy
eyed and before you know it, snap! You’re hooked, you’re cooked, you’re caught
in the tender trap.
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