Showing posts with label Mississippi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mississippi. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Crate Training a Puppy - featuring CP's foster puppy Dylan!

Written by a CP Volunteer


Dylan

My two cents is that I'd be crate training him at night. Use a small, plastic type crate so he feels secure, and put it on a chair next to your bed where he can see/hear you while you sleep. Then if he fusses, you can reach over and put your fingers in the door (if you position this correctly, you can even fall back asleep with your fingers still there ). Don't take him out when he fusses, unless it's been 4-5 hours and he might need to potty. In a few days, you'll be able to move the chair away from your bed or the crate to the floor, once he knows he's safe and close to you. Then you can slowly start moving the crate to where you want it to be. My puppies always get a soft toy and a chew bone in their crates in case they wake and need a distraction.

I'd feed like Dylan's foster mom has suggested - a mix of kibble and a wet - either the puppy plate or cottage cheese, but at 9 weeks I'd do 4 meals a day and taper to less wet food/more kibble and less feedings as she gets older and is able to hold more at each feeding. Cottage cheese can't be beat to add calcium to their diet as their bones are forming, cartilage is stiffening in their ears, and they lose their baby teeth and get their adult ones at about 5 months old. It's like they grow so rapidly, their body just sucks the nutrients up. And don't be surprised if he does rapid changes in the amount he eats, gobbling for a few days and then hitting a plateau. You'll be able to tell what portion size satisfies him for a meal (give him like 10 minutes to eat with no distractions), and then that's your portion size you should make for the next meal, adding a few more bites to the portion as he gets bigger until he's eating that adult serving of 1/2-2/3 cup kibble a day plus his dollops of the extras. If he's a good size at 6 months, he can probably be at 2 meals plus a snack before bedtime, and you could transfer him over to an all-age kibble then, plus a dollop of yogurt. Each dog is different, so you've got to use your judgement on how much he can consume at a meal and if he's getting enough to keep her growing. Our foster that just left a week ago just couldn't hold very much at a time - at 19 weeks she was still getting 3 meals a day plus a snack meal about an hour before bedtime.

Lots of toys rotated in and out of the ex pen to spark his interest, plus a snuggly bed, and once you've given him lovin' and put him back in, ignore the whines. I use a roll of brown contractor's paper($10 at Lowe's for 130') in one end of my ex pen instead of newspaper or those disposable pads that make so much fun noise when they're torn up. I put the roll on the outside and pull the paper under the end and back out just a bit on the other side. It absorbs, but excess can be wiped up and poo picked up easily.

Our featured CP foster puppy Dylan is being fostered in Mississippi and you can learn more about him by clicking here.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

CP's foster puppy Dylan says " Hey! Where's my 'furebber' home?"

Written by Dylan's foster mom



Dylan started out life a few hours before his brother and sister,, making his birthday a day earlier. But! he was the smallest and was NOT TOO PLEASED to have been shoved out quite so soon by them! He came out fiesty and ready to make sure no one pushed him around again! As he got a bit older it was quite obvious that the silly boy needed a bit of Old fashioned BILOXI BOOT CAMP FOR WAYWARD FURBUTTS. His brother and sister have already been adopted and he is ready now for YOU to give him a forever home !

After a week of working for all his meals , nose tumps, and lots of time on his back, he began to see the error of his ways.

Today he is a funny little boy who loves playing with the new kitten and cuddling with the older one! He still has a few relapses into Mr Mouth,, but a gentle reminder or thump on the nose quickly stops that.

He is smart ! He learns really well! He has learned to sit for his treats and not include your fingers!

And he is A DADDY'S BOY! Nothing makes him happier than to sit in the recliner with DAD! and watch TV!

He will come to Bill in a nano second and to me,, well,,, like a stubborn little boy! ehehehehehe!

He sleeps in his crate all night and gleefully wakes you rattling the door! LET ME OUT!

He is being fostered in Mississippi and you can click here to learn more about him.