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Puppy
Care
Points to remember:
Try to bring a puppy home only after it
is eight weeks old. By then it must have
had its Primary Vaccination against Parvo
and other diseases. Insist on the immunisation
record given by the Vet to the breeder.
If it is a dog with a Pedigree insist on
the certificate and its transfer to your
name.Remember to ask questions about the
feeding schedule.
Feeding Schedule
Readymade dry food of high quality is available
in India and if you can afford it, that
is the food of choice. Not only does it
contain the right proportions of protein,
fat and carbohydrates, vitamins and minerals,
but it is also very convenient - no cooking
is required. On the other hand you may require
commercial preparations of baby food, as
advised by the breeder. Remember to
give the right supplements of Calcium and
Vitamins if you are not giving dry food.
House Training
When you being a new puppy home, most often
it will not already be housebroken. As with
children, the only thing you need to house
break your puppy is patience, and a lot
of it. As soon as the puppy has been fed,
he should be taken out - puppies often relieve
themselves right after they eat, and so
taking them our right after eating reinforces
the idea that they should only relieve themselves
outside.
An alternative method you might want to
try is placing old sheets of newspaper on
the floor. Understand though, that this
method takes plenty of time and patience,
so don't give up. Every time the puppy relieves
itself in the house, cover the mess with
newspaper, and allow the puppy to investigate
it (for investigate it they will, if there
is even an iota of puppy-ish-ness in them).
Also, leave newspaper lying on the floor
so that once the puppy recognizes the smell,
it will use only the newspaper. To help
it get the idea, place the puppy on the
newspaper after it has eaten (and remember
the magic word - patience, because puppies
like to run about after they eat).
Children and puppies should always be supervized.
Never leave them alone with each other.
Children can be unknowingly cruel to dogs
(pulling whiskers, tail, etc.) and puppies
can unwittingly retaliate by biting, which
you certainly don't want.
Whatever behaviour you eventually want from
your puppy, you must enforce from the start.
If you dont want the grown up dog to be
allowed in the bedroom, or sit on your living
room couches, don't let them do so as puppies.
On thier first few nights in your house,
puppies will be upset, and miss their littermates
etc. Make sure they have a nice warm and
safe place to sleep in. If you want, you
can sleep near that area for the first night.
If you don't want them to beg from the dining
room table - don't feed them
while you eat at the table.
Above all, care for your puppy's health.
Contact a local vet, and by all means, establish
a good relationship. Your dog does not need
to be ill to see the vet. The vet should
see the dog while he is in good health,
so he has something to compare the not well
dog against, when you bring him in at
other times. Make sure you are up to date
on the puppy's shots. They can be expensive,
but then, you decided to pay for them the
day you decided to get the puppy. And as
any dog lover will tell you - puppies are
worth every penny you sepnd on them, and
then some more
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