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Puppy-proofing your house is only
important if you value any of your belongings . . . because everything a puppy can reach is fair game!
Puppies are like babies—they put everything in their mouths. However, unlike a
toothless human baby, a puppy has a full set of razor-sharp teeth that can
destroy pretty much anything.
♦ Think of a Puppy as a Toddler.
Just as parents child-proof a house
to protect children as they begin to walk, you need to puppy-proof for the
puppy’s sake. Evaluate every room your puppy will go into: put away anything
breakable to keep the little critter from ingesting bits and pieces of things
that can make her sick. The puppy’s well-being and safety are often overlooked
as people worry about protecting their belongings. As much as you need to
puppy-proof for your own benefit, your little pup is as vulnerable and foolish
as a toddler when it comes to the dangerous things she will put in her mouth.
♦ Puppy-proof Before You Bring the
Puppy Home.
You don’t want to make the first days
miserable by dashing from room to room, snatching objects out of the puppy’s
mouth and reprimanding her for doing what comes naturally—which is to taste
everything.
Although the checklist covers the major temptations to
puppies, don’t think your house is safe just because you’ve removed the most
desirable items. Even in an empty room, a puppy with the craving to chew is
going to do so, especially if he’s teething. Some puppies are demolition
experts: they will gnaw on baseboards (where your walls meet the floor); others
have been known to eat right through Sheetrock on the walls. This is not good
for the long-term stability of your house, but it is also dangerous for the
dog, who will be swallowing substances never meant to enter an alimentary
canal.
♦ Get a Chew-deterrent Spray.
There are nasty-tasting liquids that
can be sprayed as a deterrent on almost anything that the puppy has already
tasted—or might taste next. “Bitter Apple” and similar products are sold in pet
stores.
You can also mix up your own version of bitter-tasting spray
by filling a squirt bottle with rubbing alcohol and adding some drops of
Angostura Bitters and Tabasco or other hot sauce. Remember to test the spray on
a small patch of the surfaces you want to protect, since this concoction may
stain. But don’t expect these sprays to be some sort of guarantee that an item
is now safe from the pup—some dogs have much less sensitive taste buds and/or a
much higher drive to chew and will do so no matter how foul the object tastes.
♦ Use a Crate for Both Your Sakes.
Crate-training takes on a new meaning
when you have a chewing-aggressive puppy. It will no longer seem cruel or
unfair to have the puppy confined in the crate. A variety of puppy-safe chew
toys will satisfy his urges and keep your possessions intact.
A little puppy cannot “hold it” for more than a few hours, so
she can’t stay in the crate for more than three hours at a time when she is
very young. That means that if there isn’t going to be someone at home who can
take her out every three hours or so, then you’ll either have to come home
within that time frame or have a friend, neighbor or pet-sitter come in to take
her out. In the early weeks her life is basically going to be
potty-play-potty-sleep-potty-eat-potty-play-potty-sleep, etc. She needs a
chance to relieve herself before and after everything she does, and her small
bladder (a tiny bladder if she is a small-breed dog) has an extremely limited
capacity.
Copyright © Tracie Hotchner – Originally appeared in The Dog Bible: Everything Your Dog Wants You to Know by Tracie Hotchner
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