Tuesday, 12 January 2016

What and How to Train Your New Puppy in the First Week


Can a Siberian Husky live in the Tropics?  Yes it can.  We have just acquired a new puppy aged six weeks old.  It was the naturalist Gerald Durrell who said that if na animal is ‘happy’ it will breed.  ‘Happy’ may be anthropomophic and therefore not entirely the right word to use, but you get my drift. 

As for domestic species (Durrell was speaking in the context of wildlife), there is something called acclimatisation.  This is where a domestic species adapts to a new climate.  Acclimation is the process of adapting to a new environment.  Huskies have done both.

What should you teach your new puppy, husly or otherwise, and how?  Begin by teaching it its name.  Do that by repeating the name to the animal.

I then decided to teach my puppy to sit.  I am using clicker training and positive reinforcement.  A clicker can be bought on-line or at a good pet shop.  It works by shaping the behaviour you want from your pet.  Each time it demonstrates a desired behaviour you click your clicker.  When the dog produces the desired outcome, you give the reward.  This can be lavish praise or a food reward. 

One of the problems your puppy may encounter is diarrhoeia.  This is apt to occur due to a change of diet.  If you got your pup from a source other than a recognised breeder, then the diet the pup was used to may not be the best. Here in Cuiabá I have learned that there are three categories of pet food.  These are poor-quality, adequate and overpriced.  Even being bilingual and a Veterinary Medicine graduate, at the point of sale I still have to look carefully at the ingredients to find the food that is right for my pet. Over the past few days I have begun the process of changing diets.  Today my husky, Bela, ate three types of food: the low-quality one from the previous breeder, the better-quality one that I am switching her to, plus a few titbits of reward beef during her training session.  20 minutes later she defaecated diarrhoeia on the lawn. I view this as inevitable, and trust she will be well again soon.

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