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Welcome to Our Pet Door Training Page.

 

These training tips refer to training a dog; however the same techniques apply to cats as well.

Whether you have an adult dog or a new puppy, teaching him or her how to use a doggie door will be done the same way. When you install your doggie door, make sure you measure the "rise" of your dog (the measurement from the floor to the lowest part of your dog's chest or stomach). This measurement tells you where to place the "bottom" of your doggie door. The bottom of your doggie door should be an inch or two lower than the "rise" of your dog. If you have a puppy, you will need to install the doggie door flush with the ground and you will need to re-install it at higher intervals as your puppy grows. Another option is to take an educated guess as to how tall your dog will eventually be, install the doggie door at the appropriate height, and construct a "puppy-ramp" so your puppy can reach the doggie door and go through it comfortably.

Once the frame of the doggie door is installed in a wall or door, leave the "flap" off at first. Have someone stay inside with your dog while you go outside. Call your dog through the "hole" (doggie door frame without the flap). When he goes through and comes to you, praise him lavishly and give him a food treat. Now have the person inside the house call him through the "hole". When your dog gets to the other person, that person should praise lavishly and offer a food treat as well. Do this at least 3 times and no more than a dozen. After this, your dog will know there is a hole in the wall or the door especially for him or her.

Leave the "flap" off the doggie door for one full day. Encourage your dog to use his or her doggie door by not letting him/her use the "real" doors. Instead, you use the real door and say to your dog, "Go to your door!" pointing in the direction of his doggie door. You may need the help of someone inside to "help" the dog find his/her new door. After a half a dozen times, your dog should like this new game! If you have a very young puppy, do not expect him or her to learn "Go to your door" for many weeks or months; still give him/her the command in a happy voice and have someone inside show him/her where the doggy door is every time. It sometimes helps if you are outside (after going through a real door) and someone else helps your dog or puppy find the doggie door as you call him/her from outside.

On the second day, install the "flap". Now, you will need to repeat the same exercise as when you first sent your dog through the "hole". But this time, the person on the same side of the door as the dog will need to "push" the flap open for him/her. Each time the dog goes through the door, push the flap less and less for him/her. It is important that the dog gets used to the feel of the flap on the back of his/her head so once your dog has begun going through the door, let go of the flap so he/she feels it on his/her head and body as he/she goes through the door. Eventually the dog will need to push the flap by himself/herself and dogs are usually hesitant to do this at first. He/she will probably put his nose down by the bottom of the flap and wait for the flap to move (after all, it has moved up to now). At this point, push the flap slightly so that your dog can see it is a moveable object, let the flap bounce back to the closed position. The best way I can explain it is that you are "poking" the flap using short, quick pokes. This gives the dog a glimpse of an opening and encourages him/her to poke the door himself/herself. At this stage, some dogs begin going through the door with ease, others become quite excited, but still haven't figured out that they can push the door open. If your dog will not push the door open by himself/herself yet, secure the bottom corner of the flap to the flap itself, or above the doggie door using tape, string or anything else that works. You want the flap to be on the doggie door, but the corner turned up so that the dog can see a small opening. He/she should then feel more comfortable pushing the flap open on his/her own. If your dog needs the corner of the flap turned up, leave it turned up for 1 to 3 days until your dog is very used to using his/her doggie door. After 1 to 3 days, do the exercise again with the entire flap in place. After your enthusiastic encouragement and praise, your dog should be able to push the flap now with no problem.

Please contact us at help@acornpetco.com with any questions or for more information. Thank you.

 



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