It's freezing outside today. Well, actually it's below freezing. 12 degrees. I hate the cold. Why I live in Minnesota is beyond me. The high on Sunday and Monday is 0. That's the HIGH! Do you know who else doesn't like the cold? Ely.
See? She needs a sweater, even though she doesn't really like wearing it.
She loves being outside in the summer. I'll tie her up in the back yard and she'll sleep on the deck and run around for hours in the grass. We'll go for long walks around the neighborhood, and she'll be out front running most of the way. But in the winter, I can barely get her to go outside to pee. Now, this is a problem.
I've been back from New York for a few days, and sometimes it takes Ely a while to warm up to us when we have been gone. Now she is back to normal with me, but on Monday we were having a difficult time going potty outside. I probably took her out four or five times without her doing anything. When I can tie her up in the summer it's not a problem if she doesn't go right away, but when I have to put on a coat, boots, mittens, etc., just to take her out, and then we stand out there with her just pacing around, that's a problem. I'm cold, and I'm sure her little paws get cold as well.
See, when we got Ely from the shelter all those months ago, we were told that she was potty trained. Wrong. I guess we shouldn't be surprised, considering they didn't even know what breed she was (see blog from Nov. 30).
So when we got home, we were unpleasantly surprised to find out that she likes to go to the bathroom inside. We tried potty pads, which the shelter recommended because apparently that's what she was "potty trained" on, but it was kind of hit or miss with those. Plus, the sticky adhesive on the back stuck to the kitchen floor, and I had to pry it off with a knife, which was very annoying. We quickly abandoned those.
Everyone says the way to potty train a dog is to use a crate. The problem with trying to potty train a dog who is over a year old is that you aren't starting from scratch as one would with a puppy. She had two owners before us, and who knows what they did or did not teach her, and who knows why she is terrified of crates.
When we tried to put her in a crate, I thought she was going to tear her little legs off. She starting barking and clawing at the door trying to get out, and in general, she went crazy. Ely being in a crate lasted about 5 seconds, so using that as a training tool was out of the question.
We just decided that it would be best to take her out every couple of hours until she got the idea that she was only supposed to go to the bathroom outside. Since we got her in the winter, she had to get used to going outside when it was dark and cold out. We would wake up in the middle of the night to take her out, just to make sure she didn't have an accident. We quickly realized that she can sleep through the entire night without needing to go out, so that was good news for us. I hated getting up at 3 a.m. to take her out.
During the day is another story, however. She is good about going to the bathroom outside when you take her, but she will also still go in the house, even if she just went outside a half an hour ago. Most of the time she'll just go a little, like she is marking her territory or something. But sometimes she'll go potty in the house without giving any warning.
This is very frustrating on a few levels. Mostly because when we are gone, we don't lock her up anywhere, so she probably goes to the bathroom in the house and we might never find it if she goes on the carpet. If you don't see her doing it or see it shortly after, I'm afraid that it soaks into the carpet. I know, that sounds disgusting.
It's also annoying because I don't know how to teach her that outside is the only place she is supposed to go. I've heard that small dogs, Chihuahuas especially, are hard to potty train. I wish we knew this before we got her, but once again, we thought she was potty trained when we got her.
It's also hard to teach her that going outside is a good thing because she doesn't like treats. What? A dog that doesn't like treats? That's crazy, you may say, but it's true. We've tried many different kinds, and she's just not interested. She didn't even really like people food when we got her. Now she likes almost any kinds of meat, sometimes chips, and definitely French fries. She goes insane for fries, especially McDonald's, but it's not like I keep a pack on hand to reward her for going potty outside. We usually praise her a lot and give her affection when she goes outside, but I'm not sure how well that works.
She does know the words "potty" and "outside," and when she really does have to go and you say those words, her ears perk up and she gets all excited. So I think she understands the concept, but there is just some part that is missing, which is why she thinks it's OK to go in the house too.
Another issue we have recently been having is that now that there is snow on the ground and Ely can't see or feel the grass, it's like she is confused about where to go. She was good about going outside last winter, but I think she forgot what snow was or something, because the first time it snowed here a few weeks ago, that entire day she wouldn't go outside. There was a lot of pacing, by her, and being cold, by me. I realized that she wasn't going because she couldn't see the grass, so now we have to shovel an area in our yard to she can go in the grass. I know it probably looks ridiculous, and she will kill the grass in that area, but I'm just not sure what else to do.
Now this whole time I've been talking about going potty, I'm mostly taking about pee. As far as going #2 is concerned, she mostly does that in the house, especially now that it is winter. In the summer I would let her run around the back yard for a long time, and in that time she would eventually end up going #2, but it's not something she ever tells us she has to do, which she will when she has to pee sometimes. But I think that discussion can be left for another day.
Although it is frustrating having a dog that is about 80 percent potty trained, she's still a good dog, and I definitely wouldn't trade her for anything in the world--potty trained or not.