Welcome to Autism Forums, a friendly forum to discuss Aspergers Syndrome, Autism, High Functioning Autism and related conditions.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral
make sure you can definitely have one and keep one for the duration of its life.
Sometimes adopting one when it’s an adult can be challenging because they can come with behavioral issues, trauma issues, separation anxiety, health problems, aggressive tendencies, and problems with temperament including reactivity to other dogs and “stranger danger.”
And, always be prepared for the odd events. I used to have a standard poodle that we used to take on camping trips. Generally he was happy sleeping in the vestibule of our tent. One late fall, camping in Parke Co., Indiana, he snuck out at night and evidently visited a pig farm and came back covered in pig crap. It was too cold to attempt cleaning him and we had to travel home with him in a garbage bag taped at the neck with all the windows of the car rolled down.
My cat only once didn't use his box.
Our bathroom door is always open because of our cat's litter box. We got visitors and cat got locked out. He decided to pee on a keg of potatoes. I don't blame him. Cat piss is real treat for your nose. Cellar smelled for a week.
Can you potty train dogs? I've seen litter boxes for small dog breeds like chihauhau in a pet shop.
Good luck on your pet journey.
Can you potty train dogs? I've seen litter boxes for small dog breeds like chihauhau in a pet shop.
For indoor dogs you usually just use absorbant pads
The problem with this is what you do is teach the dog it's as it should be to pee & poop inside and with or without those absorbent pads it will continue to do so wherever it in inside incl poop. And also if it's a male that haven't been fixed most likely begin to mark his turf (inside said apartment or house)
So, in conclusion i strongly advice against this method.
Our 4 Chihuahuas use the pads pretty well. They are in the bathroom and near misses aren't too hard to clean on the tile floor. One thing I notice is they don't like soiled places so if the pads have been already used a few times they will instead use the hall. So replacing the pads frequently is important. But small dogs have small accidents I don't think it would work very well with a Saint Bernard.
We did have more of a problem when we had carpets but I replaced those with hard laminate floors.
One of our dogs we adopted specifically because she wasn't completely house trainable. Her previous owner gave her up for adoption because they couldn't deal with that. And she had begun life by being abandoned and had already been in a shelter. I didn't want to see her stuck in a shelter again. She does fine nearly all the time, it's just once in a while she kind of spaces out and just goes. I don't make a fuss. I just clean up after. She and all of them really are wonderful dogs and companions.