Puppyhood Made Easy

Puppyhood Made Easy for New Owners: Beyond Puppy Training Basics!

Your puppy is growing up and that means they will be experiencing adolescence! Yes, puppies go through it too! Here’s how to manage their changing hormones and continue to improve their obedience and behaviors!

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Puppies, much like their human counterparts, experience adolescence. It’s a great time where they’ve left their very young new puppy phase, from still trying to figure out basic things like learning their name, potty training, and who their family is, and have moved on toward becoming confident young adult pups. Now they can do more things with you that they were still too young for, but adolescence brings its own set of challenges. Your puppy might try to test their boundaries, may not listen, and put your patience to the test. Don’t panic though! This time in their life offers a great opportunity to solidify their foundational basic obedience training so it engrains into the rest of their life.

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From Puppy to Teen Dog 

So how do you know if your puppy is in their adolescent phase? Puppies will actually go through about three different adolescent phases starting at five to six months of age. The second may occur around the ten months to one-year-old mark where your puppy is almost at their complete adult size. And their last phase can go up to two years old so that entire year, give or take a few months depending on your puppy’s breed, can be considered adolescence!

Aside from age, you may simply start to notice differences in their behavior. It could be your puppy is engaged in their training then suddenly lose interest and ignore you. They might start to not listen to obedience commands you’ve trained them and they’ve successfully completed in the past. You might notice some snippy-ness or stubborn-like behaviors, or your puppy is more inclined to be independent than look to you for activity or guidance. And your puppy might show some more energy and act out impulsively i.e. counter-surfing or chewing on things they shouldn’t.

How to Manage Adolescence

 
 

The best way to manage these new teen behaviors is to reinforce their basic obedience training; avoid the inclination that they are “doing great” or “already know everything” and teeter off the consistent puppy training routine. Structure comes through crate training, “Place” command training, maintaining your puppy’s daily schedule when it comes to going out to relieve themselves, going down for naps, specific playtimes, and puppy training with food...all of these will need to be maintained to help your puppy work through their changing hormones and strengthen your leadership role with your puppy.

You may need to go back to using more food rewards if your puppy is being stubborn and not listening to commands to help reengage their focus on you. As an adolescent, they are also testing your ability as their leader so maintain that role by really bringing your puppy’s attention back to you whenever they’ve lost focus or seem more interested in something else.

Crate Training: Your puppy’s crate is one of the most useful tools in your arsenal. It’s not just for getting your puppy on a specific potty schedule or getting them to sleep through the night. Your puppy’s crate will also be indispensable when they’ve reached adolescence and you need to create a physical boundary, provide them with a safe, controlled space to settle and rest, and a space where they can simply exist and hang out while at home. 

If you notice that you’re adolescent puppy is suddenly chewing on furniture again, or so excitable by everything happening at home and can’t seem to settle, have them go to their crate. When you initially started crate training your puppy prior to six months of age, you may have started with short intervals anywhere from ten to fifteen minutes of alone time in the crate. As an adolescent, you can begin to work up towards an hour, allowing them to relax and calm any over-stimulated energy.

“Place” training: Along with your puppy’s crate, their place cot or bed combined with using the command “Place” creates a physical boundary and location for your puppy to target and remain. Again, if your puppy is “acting out” their place is a great tool to have them work out some energy, and most importantly, redirect them from whatever they shouldn’t be doing! 

LEARN HOW TO TEACH YOUR PUPPY TO NOT JUMP UP, STOP NIPPING, PLAY NICELY, AND MUCH MORE! ASK A PUPPY TRAINER EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 1 PM PT!

What can You Expect to Work on with Your Teen Dog

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Adolescence provides a great opportunity to start to challenge your puppy’s growing skillset!

During this time, you can start to introduce more advanced outdoor obedience and work using a long line. Your puppy will have a full laundry list of obedience skills that they know how to do so challenge them to work on sequences of commands rather than a few at a time.

Most of their puppy training has used food as a reward. We even mentioned that during your puppy’s adolescence phases to incorporate more food as a way to get their attention! Actually, this is a great time to start to wean them off of being rewarded every time, once you have their focus. The reality is, you won’t always carry a treat bag with you so you want your puppy to listen regardless.

Help wean your puppy off of food by working with them through longer sequences of commands. For example, you can use “Place” patterning routines asking your puppy to go to their place, and have them, “Sit”, “Stay” then “Come” to you and even go to another place target. You can repeat this pattern of sequences a few times before rewarding your puppy with food, slowly growing the amount of duration between performing a routine and their reward.

Not only will you work to wean your puppy off of food rewards but this is an opportunity to remove other support tools you’ve utilized to help them work through commands: leash-pressure, luring with food and interchanging verbal and hand signals for commands instead of using both every time.

What to Keep Working On As Your Puppy Grows into an Adult Dog

In new situations, such as bringing your puppy to a new park or to a friend’s yard, your puppy’s obedience may need to fall back on the full support of food, leash pressure, luring, and verbal and hand signals you were using early on in their puppy training. But this doesn’t mean that they have regressed in their training or that you failed! It’s normal for your puppy to test their boundaries all over again in new settings, whereas at home or a place they know, your puppy already built up foundational obedience behaviors and muscle memory so they know what to expect. 

Keep Consistent with Their Puppy Training

As your puppy continues to mature, you should continue to practice their basic obedience, building their duration, distance, and working through distractions. Maintain regular puppy training schedule as you normally would in each new setting you bring them.

Go Back to Rewarding Before Weaning
While it may sound like we are telling you to take a step back, you aren’t! Go back to rewarding your puppy for each command, especially in a new place or when you begin long lead work outdoors. You need to help build up their foundational obedience in those settings as they work through a new stimulus that’s pulling their focus. When you’ve had a few sessions with their regular amount of food reward and other support techniques, then start to take a few away. 

Don’t Throw Away Your Puppy’s Daily Schedule

Some owners make the mistake of loosening up on their puppy’s daily schedule because their puppies are close to that ten-month-old or year mark. Many times, around this time frame, puppies may start to have accidents in the house or do other behaviors that they normally wouldn’t. Your puppy’s daily schedule is their guidebook and how they know what to expect and what’s expected of them! Maintain their regular potty breaks, feedings, playtime sessions, downtimes, and training sessions all throughout their adolescence.

Above all, remember that your puppy training is working and to rely on the work that you’ve already put in place to help you get through more challenging days! Your puppy is growing up and becoming an adult, they will continue to look to you for leadership and guidance!

Is your puppy showing signs of adolescent behavior? Do you feel like you need more help understanding how to work through their changes and adapting their training? Join us every Wednesday at 1 pm PT on @thepuppyacademy Instagram for a live trainer Q&A!

Check out these blogs related to puppy training and more!

Puppyhood Made Easy for New Owners: Tips to Master Walking Outside with Your Puppy!

Puppyhood Made Easy for New Owners: Dos and Dont’s of Exercising Your Puppy!

How to Prepare for Your Puppy’s First Hike!

Puppyhood Made Easy for New Owners: Advancing Your Puppy’s Obedience Outdoors!

Take everything you and your puppy have been working on the past few months and bring it to the next level: outdoor obedience!

The Puppy Academy Students (Left to Right: Levi, Maverick, and Chewie)

The Puppy Academy Students (Left to Right: Levi, Maverick, and Chewie)

If you have been following along with our Puppyhood Made Easy for New Owners and Puppy Training 101 blog series, now it’s time to take all of the obedience commands, and routines, and apply them outside! The next phase of training will work on adding gradual distance between you and your puppy, even longer durations on holding certain commands, and real-world distractions that your puppy will face throughout their life.

Still, even if your puppy has seemed to breeze through their obedience indoors (or not!), and learned to listen to their commands in your yard or local neighborhood, a change in location can arise new challenges in getting your puppy to listen! For this puppy training phase, you should have your puppy on a standard six-foot leash, working up to ten, fifteen, and eventually one as long as twenty feet the better your puppy gets at performing obedience commands outside.

Using a Long-Line for Advanced Outdoor Obedience

Bring your puppy to a new location to practice their outdoor obedience. A park in your town or city is a great choice especially if you plan on taking your puppy there in the future! Pick a spot that is quiet and not heavy with distractions for your first few sessions. As you continue to work on building up their focus, you can gradually bring them closer to more active areas. 

With your puppy on a long lead, start by working on a familiar routine that your puppy is comfortable performing. Ask your puppy for a “Sit” then add in a “Down”, and “Stay”. Throughout these initial training phases outdoors, maintain a calm tone, and use robotic movements, in order to keep your puppy focused on listening and not getting overly excited or distracted by your energy. Even if your puppy showed the ability to work with a fluid and energetic delivery of commands at home, if your puppy starts to get distracted, or becomes excited outside, reverting to steady and calm command delivery, slow and robotic movements, can help snap them into working and listening mode!

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Adding in the 3Ds - Distance, Duration, and Distractions

The Puppy Academy student, Bori!

The Puppy Academy student, Bori!

Also known as the 3Ds, adding distance, duration, and distractions to your puppy’s outside obedience work will help increase their level of focus and communication with you! If you have already practiced doing these advanced routines at home and in your own backyard or neighborhood, try doing them at your local park for an added challenge!

A good routine to practice with your puppy outside is a combination of “Sit”, “Down” and “Stay”. You can also work up to adding in “Come” from a distance however, it’s a good practice to establish your puppy’s focus and longer impulse control first before building in the recall.  

By using a long lead, your puppy will essentially perform the same commands they already know, however you are gradually increasing the amount of distance between yourself and your puppy. With duration, your puppy will hold a specific command for longer and longer periods of time, increasing their focus and decreasing their impulse to snap toward something more exciting. Finally, and the most challenging is layering in distractions. From people, dogs, cars, sounds, etc., all of these real-world situations will challenge your puppy’s ability to remain cued in on you.

You can learn more about incorporating the 3Ds into your puppy’s regular training, and some fun routines to try in our blog Puppy Training 101: Advance Your Puppy’s Training with Distance, Duration, and Distraction, a.k.a. The 3Ds!

Next time you’re out with your puppy and are ready to practice this routine, start off by asking for a “Sit” then add in “Down” and “Stay”. At this point, start working on the distance part of the 3Ds, taking slow robotic steps backward and away from your puppy, working your way to the end of your lead. When incorporation the next phase, duration, keep your hand up with your palm flat and facing your puppy (this is the hand signal for the “Stay” command) as you move back and keep it there for the period of time you want your puppy to hold their position. Finally, even if you’re in a quiet area of your local park with minimal distractions but you want to start trying your puppy’s impulse control, make yourself the distraction! You can do this by taking steps to the side, essentially circling your puppy which is called 360-degree practice!

Finally to finish off the routine, call your puppy back to you with their name and “Come!” and reward them for a job well done! 

LEARN HOW TO TEACH YOUR PUPPY HOW TO LISTEN OUTDOORS! ASK A PUPPY TRAINER EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 1 PM PT!

Reality Check: What to Expect from Your Puppy and How to Adjust

If you’ve started your puppy’s outdoor obedience, you might notice that your puppy is easily distracted or excitable. That’s totally normal and to be expected. In fact, it’s a great opportunity to work on regaining attention through distractions! 

One way you can readjust if you notice that your puppy is focusing on what’s happening around them instead of you is to first try to find a quieter place. This goes especially if this is your first or one of your first sessions. Work up to the noisier and congested areas little by little but we always recommend staying a distance first to really help your puppy focus on the work and listening to your commands.

Secondly, try to readjust your routines by adding in recall from distractions. If your puppy notices people walking by, other dogs, a squirrel, etc., try to gain back their attention by switching your tone and energy level and calling them back to you! Say your puppy’s name and “Come”, then follow up by rewarding them with some food. By doing so, you’re actively working with your puppy to learn to respond to you even if things are happening around them. 

You might also find that your puppy isn’t staying put for very long, getting up to sniff around before you release them with “Break”. In these situations, adjust your own expectations of what you want from your puppy versus what they can do at the moment. Remember that changing location adds the challenge of working against distractions and the curiosity and excitement that may come along with it. If you want your puppy to hold their “Down” and “Stay”, try a few seconds at a time then release them. Build up, slowly, until your puppy can hold the command for a minute, then two, and so on mixing between longer and shorter intervals.

Take a moment to look back at all the achievements you and your puppy have been able to fulfill together! Outdoor obedience is advanced work that challenges many pups and their owners. It’s a continuing work in progress and probably something you will continue even when your puppy is a one-year-old young adult. But you’ve conquered everything from their early potty accidents, socializing them with the world, the obedience commands, and now your in this phase! It’s a huge step and your puppy is set to live a comfortable, happy, and fulfilling life thanks to the work you’ve put in!

There’s still more to come in Puppyhood Made Easy for New Owners series! In the meantime, join us each Wednesday at 1 pm PT on our @thepuppyacademy Instagram for live puppy trainer Q&As. If you need help with outdoor obedience or any other puppy-related topic, we’re here to help you!

Check out these blogs related to puppy training and more!

Puppyhood Made Easy for New Owners: Dos and Don’ts of Exercising Your Puppy!

How to Prepare for Your Puppy’s First Hike!

Puppyhood Made Easy for New Owners: How to Play with Your Puppy Pt. 2!