EWES MY PET,LLC
ewesmypet@ghvalley.net
(719) 330-3419
http://www.ewesmypet.com
CARING FOR YOUR NEW PUPPY
Congratulations!
You are now the proud owner of a very special Miniature Schnauzer puppy. To
prevent stress, keep your new pup at home for a week or two. Just like
a new baby, there is work to be done so your lifestyle isn't totally upset.
You must remember, this is a baby who is going to be fully grown in just a few
months, so you only have weeks to establish your ground rules. If you don't
work daily with this puppy, you will have an ill-mannered, spoiled brat by the
time he/she is six months old. You are the adult, the puppy is the child—
you are the boss!
Daytime:
A playpen is a must. Don't lock the pup in a kitchen, bathroom or utility room
while you are home. Keep it in a playpen in the room you're most often in, so
it can watch what you are doing and not be getting into trouble behind your
back. When you let the puppy out of the playpen, this is his/her time to be
with you and your family. This is the time to play and interact and to learn
the boundaries of your home. This is NOT the time for the puppy to go
exploring on its own. You are buying a toddler without a diaper. Do not play
with the puppy on carpeting if you do not want to clean up carpeting.
Paper, books, kleenex, toilet paper and all reading material can become confetti
in less than five minutes.
Nighttime:
An enclosed carrier is used to sleep in at night. It should not be used for
punishment. This is a happy place. I even feed my dogs in their carriers and
they look forward to being there. You may use a piddle pad on the bottom until
the puppy is old enough to chew it up. At that time you must plan regular potty-out-of-doors
times. A towel or old rug may be used and you may add a toy or stuffed animal
and/or dog cookie in the cage, then place the puppy in at bedtime. If you place the kennel on a chair or table next to your bed, so the pup can see you from the kennel, he/she is less likely to cry. They simply want to be with you and know where you are. If the puppy
begins to cry, clap your hands and firmly say "No!" If the puppy continues
to cry, place a towel over the front of the cage so the puppy cannot see you,
clap your hands and firmly say "No!" again. If the puppy keeps crying,
take a shoe, book, ruler or any object that will make a loud noise and hit the
top of the cage with it, and firmly say "No!" This loud noise and
vibration will instill the word NO into your dog's memory. Usually this only
has to be done a couple of times for the first few days, then when you clap
your hands and say "No" the puppy settles down.
Feeding:
I use Pro Plan Chicken/Rice Puppy food. Do not change the brand of food unless you absolutely have to OR you will have diggie diarrhea. Feed three times a
day moistened with water, continue to increase the food amount slowly as the puppy grows, until the puppy lets you know it wants to be fed only two times a
day. The puppy will stop eating all its food at each feeding. This is the time
to increase the amount and decrease the number of feedings. By six months, the
puppy eats only once a day. Do not leave food down longer than 20 minutes. If
your dog hasn't finished, just pick up the bowl and place it in the refridgerator
until the next meal. Never leave food down all day for your puppy.
You'll never be able to housebreak it and you'll have an overweight, picky eater.
No one needs to be eating all day long. At six months to one year of age you
may switch over to an adult dog food as most of your puppy's growth is now reached.
Puppies can eat all they want of the food you have measured out, at their mealtimes.
But you must judge if they seem to be getting fat. Adult dogs only eat one cup
of a high quality food per day. Do not feed a soft food or only canned food on a regular basis..
If you do, you will have a dog with bad teeth, bad gums and bad breath. There are times when you may want to use canned food to encourage eating such as when your dog has been or is sick. Then when he/she is well you discontinue the canned food.
Please, no water after 6 PM. You will discover the seventh wonder of the world— give them an ounce and they'll give you a quart. This means NO food or water after you have fed your puppy in the evening.
Bathing:
Once every 7 to 10 days. I like the Lambert Kay Premium Shampoo and Lambert
Kay Fresh and Clean Creme Rinse. I also like any of the Bio Groom products, or Miracle Coat Premium Pet Shampoo ( this product is expensive but you dilute it and it will go a long way.) Or any other brand of good shampoo/conditioner
from PetsMart or PetCo.
Upset Stomach:
Puppy will get into things that will upset its stomach. Also bathing, grooming
and new situations can cause a loose stool.You may purchase canned pumpkin form the grocery store and give your pup 1 tsp (for puppy) or 1 TBL (for adult) each feeding, mixed into the food. The stools will firm up.You may also add plain boiled white rice
to alone or with the pumpkin to its food (one-half to three-fourths of a cup of rice) and stools will firm right
up. If the stool is watery, squirty, bloody or mucousy, take the puppy to the
vet. It could be colitis, or coccidiosis and the pup needs to be checked. Make
sure you have no poisonous plants that your puppy can graze on such as Poinsettia,
Oleander, Elephant Ear, or any plant that produces a white milky substance when
it is cut or when you snap a leaf off. Any of these can cause a puppy to become
very ill, and if he/she has ingested enough, even death. Watch your puppy outside,
he's very curious and can (and will) get into everything.
Housebreaking:
While you are at home take your pup out every hour on the hour for the
first 4 days (daytime only). Don't talk to it until it has gone to
the bathroom. Then love it, play with it, pet it and tell it how good it is.
Also take puppy out the minute it wakes up day or night (if you are home and
it's not 3 in the morning), after every meal, as soon as you get up in the morning,
and last thing at night before bed. Do not wake up a sleeping puppy to take it our at night. However,if the pup wakes you up, then by all means, take it out.THERE IS ONE UNBREAKABLE RULE: IF THE PUPPY'S FEET ARE ON THE FLOOR IN YOUR HOUSE, YOUR EYES ARE ON THE DOG. (NO EXCEPTIONS!) Watch your puppy; it will be telling you
it has to go by its actions. Most accidents in the house are people accidents,
not puppy accidents. When a puppy goes to the door, or whimpers to go out, and
you say "In a minute," and take it out 5 minutes later, you will have
to clean YOUR accident up off the floor.Teach your puppy to ring a bell when it has to go out. You hang a cow bell (or other bell or wind chimes) on a ribbon down at the puppy's level and make the puppy ring the bell (use his front foot or nose) each time you go through the door to the outside. He will learn in very short order that the bell has to ring for him to go out. This will save you from guessing when he needs to go out and your friends will be amazed at how smart your puppy is.
Fly Swatter:
Use this instead of a rolled newspaper to swat the playpen, floor, or puppy's
rear if you need to stop fighting, crying, bad behavior, if he is running towards
the street, or if you catch him in the act of having an accident in the house.
Love:
Give lots of love and praise. This puppy really, really wants to make you proud
of it and a little love goes a long way.
If you have any questions or need any help, please feel free to contact me. Have fun and best wishes!