Anonymous wrote:So glad to have seen this thread-- we are also expecting a first puppy-- an 11-12wk old lab/hound mix. Any advice on:
1) Crate recommendations?
2) Also- should we set up a puppy play pen or just play to keep it in the crate mainly until housebroken (which we've been advised)
3) Treat recommendations for training?
4) Trainer recommendations?
TIA for any advice!!
Anonymous wrote:Best advice: expect to regret your decision to get a puppy. For the first few weeks/months it's like bringing a new toddler into your house: suddenly everything you do is controlled by the dog. You may be getting up to let it out 3x a night. You'll have to watch it constantly to make sure it's not chewing things it's not supposed to. You'll be eaten alive by small puppy teeth. But hopefully, you soon come out the other side and have a still cute but much easier puppy. I just didn't realize how overwhelming it would be and was ready to give up. But I'm so glad we didn't.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve been conned by our pup who knows it will get a treat for putting the wrong things in its mouth. We tried that distraction tactic...fail. Please let us know if there is a better way. The dog picked up an empty ziploc bag DS dropped and ran with it.
Anonymous wrote:Best advice: expect to regret your decision to get a puppy. For the first few weeks/months it's like bringing a new toddler into your house: suddenly everything you do is controlled by the dog. You may be getting up to let it out 3x a night. You'll have to watch it constantly to make sure it's not chewing things it's not supposed to. You'll be eaten alive by small puppy teeth. But hopefully, you soon come out the other side and have a still cute but much easier puppy. I just didn't realize how overwhelming it would be and was ready to give up. But I'm so glad we didn't.
Anonymous wrote:Best advice: expect to regret your decision to get a puppy. For the first few weeks/months it's like bringing a new toddler into your house: suddenly everything you do is controlled by the dog. You may be getting up to let it out 3x a night. You'll have to watch it constantly to make sure it's not chewing things it's not supposed to. You'll be eaten alive by small puppy teeth. But hopefully, you soon come out the other side and have a still cute but much easier puppy. I just didn't realize how overwhelming it would be and was ready to give up. But I'm so glad we didn't.
Anonymous wrote:Best advice: expect to regret your decision to get a puppy. For the first few weeks/months it's like bringing a new toddler into your house: suddenly everything you do is controlled by the dog. You may be getting up to let it out 3x a night. You'll have to watch it constantly to make sure it's not chewing things it's not supposed to. You'll be eaten alive by small puppy teeth. But hopefully, you soon come out the other side and have a still cute but much easier puppy. I just didn't realize how overwhelming it would be and was ready to give up. But I'm so glad we didn't.
Anonymous wrote:1- Use the real grass for potty.
2- We used treats when potty training for the first few weeks and lots of excited praise. Most important for potty training is crate training.
My advice is be consistent (especially all members of the household doing the same exact thing and using the same command words, etc. so the puppy doesn't get confused) and have LOTS of patience.
Something that a lot of people don't realize is that you WILL get the puppy blues at some point. Puppies are super cute but super annoying - the nipping/biting and accidents inside can get so frustrating. Just remember that this phase will pass and an amazing companion is on the other side![]()