Jul 29

Potty Training My Min PIn–Again

Athena

Athena

After our Min Pin, Athena, was potty trained in 2008, I didn’t think I would have to do it again, but I was mistaken. I have taken her to my parents’ house, and she doesn’t consider their house her den like she does at our house. Why? I have no idea. If you have any ideas, please let me know.

Regardless of the reason, I am out at 3am for another potty training lesson. Needless to say, I am not happy to re-learn the art of cheering over dog potty at this time of night. But, I am a dog owner, and so I am.

Here are the basic principles: Set her up for success and reward when she potties outdoors. Notice I do not scold her when she goes indoors. It would be fine to tell her “no” if I catch her in the act but useless to do it long after she has pottied.

Setting her up for success: She gets the privilege of being free in the house only 1-2 hours after she has both pottied and piddled. After 2 hours, she goes outside again and if she does nothing, I put her in her crate for an hour. (She sees her crate as her den and won’t potty in there.) This way, she doesn’t have much of an opportunity to go to the bathroom in the house.

Reward: She gets a treat as well praise when she goes outdoors. I usually give her dog food as treats. It is handy, stores well, and, for some reason, tastes much better if it comes out of the treat bowl than it does coming out of the sack. I am also her one-person cheering section. When we go out, I give the command “potty” or “piddle.” Usually, I tell her to piddle first and, after she has done that, I tell her to potty. When she does one, I tell her “good potty” or “good piddle” several times along with “good dog.” I do this in a high-pitched, enthusiastic tone. (The enthusiasm can be faked, especially at 3am.)

This is my strategy for potty training. If you would like to share your tips or strategies, please leave a comment.

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Jul 29

Riding in Cars with Dogs: Doggie Seat Belts?

I thought car restraint systems for dogs were silly and only used by people fanatical about their dogs until one day when I was driving with my Miniature Pinscher, Zeus. Because I was driving by myself that day, he was in his carrier instead of his usual place in the passenger seat on my lap. Then, the unexpected happened: we were in an accident, and my car rolled 2 1/2 times. Since Zeus was in his carrier, all he suffered was a bad fright. However, when I was walking through the wreckage, I saw a water bottle that had been thrown out of my car during the accident and then squished by the car as it rolled. My stomach turned over, and I thought: “That could have been Zeus.”

Since then, I have always transported my dogs in carriers. Sometimes, I use the regular hard-sided plastic type, and sometimes I use a soft-sided one that straps into the seat belt system, but they are always restrained.

I know that dogs love to ride with their heads out the window, sniff air vents, and have freedom in the car, but I believe that the protection of a carrier is more important, and it is especially important with small dogs, like Min Pins, and puppies. Small dogs and puppies who are loose in the cabin of a vehicle can get under the brake pedal and make it impossible to brake.

Do you have a car restraint system for your dog? Why or why not?

Visit the Pet Store Directory to find stores that carry dog car restraint systems and carriers.

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Jul 27

Crate Training a Miniature Pinscher: Should You Try It?

Self-crated

Photo Credit: Jinx McCombs on Flickr

Why Crate Train?

Crate training can be a useful tool for the owner of any breed of dog, but it is especially useful for Min Pin owners. Not only does crate training a dog reduce the number of messes on the floor, it also provides a safety for the dog in your absence. Another benefit of crate training is that many dogs feel safer and are calmer in a crate while you are gone.

Crate training Miniature Pinschers is especially helpful because Min Pins’ natural curiosity and energy can lead to mischief. This is dangerous to your dog as well as your possessions.

House Training vs. Potty Training
Potty training your puppy is simply training your dog to eliminate in a place that you designates (outdoors, training pads, etc.). House training your puppy encompasses that and more. House training is teaching your dog how to act in the house. In addition to potty training, house training includes teaching what is an appropriate chew, and any other rules you set, like rules about getting on furniture, how to act during dinner time (yours and theirs), etc. Crate training is helpful with all aspects of house training, but the focus of crate training discussed here is potty training.

What is Crate Training?

Crate training, just like the name implies, is training your dog that the crate is his home or den. A dog will not eliminate in its den, and therefore you can leave the dog in its crate while you are gone without coming home to a mess. This can help tremendously while potty training. However, keep in mind that young pups or older dogs new to crate training can only be left in a crate for a short time without a break outside. This is why an inner “den” and outer “elimination area” (discussed below) are important.

How does Crate Training Work?

To crate train, you need an outer elimination area lined with newspapers or training pads and smaller area that the dog can consider its den where it does not eliminate. This set up can be used not only for potty training, but house training, also.

Further Information:

This video shows the set up for the den/elimination areas as well as other tips for house training your puppy.

 

Other Resources:

Miniature Pinscher Club of America article about Housebreaking a Miniature Pinscher

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Jul 24

Color Dilution Alopecia in Miniature Pinschers: Should Blue and Fawn Min Pins Be Bred?

Border Collie with Colour dilution alopoecia

Photo Credit: At the VETS Veterinary Clinic

What is color-dilution alopecia?

Color-dilution alopecia is a hereditary skin disease found in “color-diluted” dogs caused by the d1 allele of the color dilution gene (Kim et al, 2005). The Miniature Pinscher is one dog breed affected by this disease. Color-diluted Min Pins are either “blue,” which is a diluted black, or “fawn,” which is diluted chocolate. The color dilution phenotype is carried by an autosomal recessive gene. Thus, the dogs can be carriers of the gene without having a diluted color itself.

Color-dilution alopecia is also known as the following: blue balding syndrome, blue doberman syndrome, congenital alopecia, and blue dog disease. (Kim, et al, 2005).

Color-diution alopecia causes patches of hair loss and scaly skin mainly on the trunk and back. Although it develops at a young age, color-dilution alopecia is not present at birth.

What is an allele?

An allele is a gene variant. Take blood type, for example: A and B are different alleles of the same gene. They have the same function, but the DNA sequence is slightly different. Often, two alleles can differ by as little as one letter (base) in a DNA sequence. This is amazing given the fact that it is only one change in possibly millions.

What does “autosomal recessive” mean?

Autosomal simply means that the gene is not on one of the sex chromosomes (X or Y). Recessive means that the trait will only appear if two of the recessive alleles are present (dominant alleles are not present).

What are colors are recognized by AKC?

Standard: Black & Rust, Black & Tan, Chocolate & Rust, Chocolate & Tan, Red, Stag Red.

Alternate: Blue & Rust, Blue & Tan, Blue Stag Red, Chocolate Stag Red, Fawn & Rust, Fawn (Isabella) & Tan, Fawn (Isabella) Stag Red.

Dogs with standard coat colors are allowed in conformation, obedience, and agility whereas alternate colors are only allowed in obedience and agility.

I have owned blue and/or fawn Min Pins before and they have been perfectly healthy. Why should I worry about breeding them?

The d1 allele of the dilution gene (d17) is likely responsible for color-dilution alopecia (Kim et al, 2005). Since there may be more than one allele that can cause color-dilution, it is possible that any one particular genetic lineage may not be at risk for the disease. However, until more is known about the disease, there is not way to tell which dogs with dilute coat colors are carriers of the d1 allele. Thus, breeding dogs with dilute color or a dilute color in the lineage is not congruent with breeding for the betterment of the breed.

I want to buy a blue or fawn Miniature Pinscher. How can I avoid buying a puppy with color-dilution alopecia?

The short answer is: “You can’t.” Color-dilution alopecia is not present at birth and may not manifest itself until the pup is as old as 2-3 years (Derm Digest, 2010). If you know there is not any color-dilution alopecia in the pup’s lineage, you might be able to more likely to avoid the disease, but I suspect that breeders either don’t keep or may not want to share that information. Thus, it would be difficult to adopt, with any degree of certainty, a healthy blue or fawn puppy with a dilute coat color.

I have a color-diluted Min Pin. Is there anything I can do to prevent color-dilution alopecia?

Since color-diluted alopecia is a genetic disorder, there is no cure. However, you can watch for red, scabby bumps with a “bloody” appearance. This is a sign of a bacterial infection, which commonly develops in the patches affected by color-dilution alopecia..

For further information

Jae Hoon Kim, Kyung Il Kang, Hyun Joo Sohn, Gye Hyeong Woo, Young Hwa Jean, Eui Kyung Hwang. (2005). Color-dilution alopecia in dogs. J Vet Sci. 6(3): 259~261.

Color Dilution Alopecia. Aug. 2010 Newsletter. Derm Digest. Animal Dermatology Clinic.

Hereditary Alopecia and Hypotrichosis in the Merck Veterinary Manuel.

Colors and Markings (Miniature Pinscher) on the AKC web site.

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Jul 19

Raw Meat Diet: Healthful or Harmful?

Photo Credit: Amanda Hirsch on Flickr

What does the cooking process do to meat?
Cooking unfolds (denatures) the proteins in meat. Imagine a string of beads wadded up in your hand. Now, imagine letting that string dangle from your finger. This is the exact same way that cooking changes the meat. It does not change the beads (amino acids). It only rearranges them. Digestion also unfolds the meat, and also chops the protein up into its component amino acids. This is accomplished both by the hydrochloric acid in your dog’s stomach and protein-digesting (proteolytic) enzymes. Thus, if the proteins aren’t yet unfolded when your dog eats the meat, they most certainly will be not only unfolded, but chopped to bits by the time the meat is digested. Then the “beads on the string” or amino acids will be on their way to building muscle and enzymes your dog needs.

Why cook meat?
What is more important to your dog’s health than whether the protein in meat is denatured is that the cooking process kills bacteria and viruses than can cause food poisoning. Dogs in the wild eat raw meat, and they also get food poisoning, worms, and all sorts of diseases. I don’t mean that you should panic if your dog should happen to scoop up a morsel of raw meat dropped on the floor, but it may not be wise to intentionally feed your dog raw meat on a regular basis, especially to the exclusion of other foods.

Isn’t natural better?
It’s also true that dogs evolved eating raw meat. Their teeth, eating habits, and many more evolutionary clues point to a diet of raw meat. However, it is also natural that animals in the wild are plagued with starvation, disease, and death. Dogs in the wild do not live as long as we want our pets to live. We want optimum health for our best friends.

Do you feed your dog a special diet? If so, what do you do? Tell us why or why not.

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Jul 16

Alkaline Batteries: Household Hazard

sick miniature pinscher

Tummy ache

At one time or another, everyone with a Min Pin has thought, “What will it get into next?” One thing I never worried about was alkaline batteries. However, one day I found my Miniature Pinscher, Athena, chewing on one. Luckily, she hadn’t gotten inside the battery yet, but had I not caught her in time, she surely would have.

Batteries are part of our everyday lives, but are, of course, highly toxic. A Min Pin puppy is especially at risk because batteries are the right size, shape, and density to make a good chew toy, it thinks. Combine this with the Min Pin’s acrobatic skills (jumping on tables and counters), and disaster awaits.

According to the Merck Veterinary Manuel, dogs are the species most commonly involved in alkaline battery poisoning. Batteries are both corrosive to the GI tract and pose a foreign body hazard. Check out toxicology information about batteries and other household hazards in the MVM.

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Jul 12

How to Teach Your Min Pin Almost Anything

20120708-015848.jpg

To say that Miniature Pinschers can be a handful is an understatement, as any Min Pin owner knows. Miniature Pinschers are headstrong, energetic, and think for themselves. However, Miniature Pinschers can be trained to be calm, well-disciplined dogs. Here, I discuss training Min Pins, but the same strategy can be applied to all dog breeds or almost anything with a pulse, e.g., your spouse, children, extended family, friends, or people in general.

When teaching a dog a command, first one trains the dog to associate the behavior with the word. For some dogs, this is all that is necessary, and the dog will obey the command every time. For other dogs (like Min Pins), a second step is necessary: Make the dog obey every time just because you say so. This can be very frustrating, but with the steps outlined in later posts, it is possible, and even enjoyable.

Min Pin training: it’s so easy in the beginning

In this video, a Min Pin owners demonstrates the the intelligence of the Miniature Pinscher–learning what commands mean in a short time.

Jack – Red Miniature Pinscher

What he hasn’t encountered yet is convincing the Min Pin that it must do the command just because the owner says so.

Min Pins, especially puppies, can be a handful. To have a well-behaved Miniature Pinscher, training advice can be especially helpful. Obedience classes, DVDs, and reading can all be sources of good information.

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Jul 08

Zeus 1999-2012

Zeus

Zeus 1999-2012

Zeus, our black and tan Miniature Pinscher, passed away Saturday, June 30, 2012. Although he was (literally) in the hands of our very capable veterinarian, his little heart just gave out. He lived a full life. He was 12 years old when he passed away. He brought energy, joy, and love into our home. Gene, Athena (our other Min Pin), and I miss him very much.

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Jul 08

Train Your Min Pin in Three Steps

Miniature pinscher puppyThree basic principles are key when training a dog: consistency, reinforcement (positive or negative), and repetition. Used correctly, these three principles can get your willful canine under control.

The Three (but not Necessarily Easy) Steps
Step 1: Consistency. Consistency teaches the dog what you want it to do with a given command. Consistency requires a lot of discipline, and mostly from the owner. To do otherwise sends your dog mixed signals, and he or she doesn’t know what you want.  Worse yet, if you give in to your dog’s demand, e.g., feeding from the table, your dog will learn that if he or she bugs you enough, you will give in.  Not good!  Because consistency means enforcing a rule no matter how tired, busy, or distracted you are, so before creating a rule, ask yourself if you want to enforce it.

Step 2: Reinforcement. Reinforcement is incentive for your dog to associate a word with an action. Positive reinforcement should be used as much as possible. Treats and clicker training work well. However, sometimes negative reinforcement is necessary, especially with Min Pins.  Miniature Pinschers were bred to hunt vermin in castles and on farms.  Thus, they were mostly left on their own and had little human interaction.  So, while my Min Pins generally prefer that I am pleased with them, it isn’t their whole world. Choose your method of negative reinforcement carefully. The dog should dislike it, but the punishment should be humane, effective, and fit the crime. A squirt with a water gun works with my dogs.

You may read about the “alpha roll,” where the dog owner roughly picks up the dog then takes it to the ground, rolling the dog on its back.  I took Zeus–a 10 pound dog–to obedience school, and they advised that I slam him on the ground to show him who was “boss.”  This is a BAD practice.  You are scaring and possibly hurting the dog.  You are creating fear and anxiety, where you want to build trust.

However, I have found that a gentle variation can work well.  If you gently roll the dog on its back then place your hand on its chest and speak gruffly, it sends a message that you are the boss.  I’ve also found another variation.  When my Min Pins are not following commands, or even being aggressive toward me, here is how I make them submit:

I put one hand on their shoulders and another on their hips then force them to lie down.  To avoid injury, I don’t press in the middle of their back.  I make them stay until they don’t try to get up even if I lift my hands.  When they are being particularly stubborn, this can take a while, so be sure to get comfy before starting.  Athena was a particularly stubborn Min Pin.  She and I did this for 30 minutes before she would stay.  However, she was a MUCH better behaved dog afterward.  It was well worth my time.

Reinforcement tells your dog that he or she has no choices.  Your command must be obeyed, and that is the essence of obedience training.

Step 3: Repetition. Repetition solidifies the command by getting it through to your dog that it must do the command just because you say so. The amount of repetition required will vary depending on the command and the dog. Since Min Pins have such a short attention span, I recommend training 5 minutes per day for as many days as it takes. Don’t get discouraged. The command will eventually sink in.  Some dogs can stubbornly resist learning a command.

My first dog, Zeus, for example refused to learn the command “play dead.”  However, I was more stubborn that he was.  I spent 5 minutes training this one trick a day for a year.  Why did it take so long?  My theory is that lying with his belly exposed was a very submissive posture, and he wanted me to be his subordinate.  However, after a year, he would reliably obey the command–he realized he had no choice.  I didn’t know it when I was training him, but this command was a lifesaver.  As he aged, he got quite a temper.  Once he was angry, the only thing that would calm him down was commanding him to play dead, i.e., getting into a submissive posture.

Tether Method

One effective method is to tether your dog to you at all times when he or she isn’t in a crate.  You can tether either literally by clipping the dog’s leash to your belt loop or just keep your eyes on the dog at all times.  Your goal is to make sure the dog can do no wrong.  For example, when you see him or her get an inappropriate chew toy, e.g., your Prada handbag, you can redirect to an appropriate chew toy before any damage is done.

Zeus the Min Pin

My first dog, Zeus.

After a week or two, you can start letting the dog out of your sight for short amounts of time, building gradually until your dog knows how to behave in the house.  I used this method to train Zeus.  When I began leaving him for short amounts of time, one of the first things I did was go to the bathroom without him.  (Long time dog owners know this is a luxury.  lol.)  When I came back, he was almost frantic–he had never been left alone before, and he didn’t know what to do!  He quickly accepted more freedom.

I have found it is the most rewarding way to train a dog.  It is time consuming, but as in all dog training, and most of life, you get out of it what you put into it.  Using the tether method, in addition to having a well trained dog, you will have a strong relationship because of spending so much time together.

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Jul 05

Rainbow Bridge: How Dogs Get to Heaven


Have you lost a pet who was special to you? If so, you will want to read about the
Rainbow Bridge, a beautiful poem that gave me solace when my dog, Zeus, passed away. Then, leave a comment telling us about your pet.

Rainbow Bridge

Just this side of heaven is a place called Rainbow Bridge.

When an animal dies that has been especially close to someone here, that pet goes to Rainbow Bridge.
There are meadows and hills for all of our special friends so they can run and play together.
There is plenty of food, water and sunshine, and our friends are warm and comfortable.

All the animals who had been ill and old are restored to health and vigor; those who were hurt or maimed are made whole and strong again, just as we remember them in our dreams of days and times gone by.
The animals are happy and content, except for one small thing; they each miss someone very special to them, who had to be left behind.

They all run and play together, but the day comes when one suddenly stops and looks into the distance. His bright eyes are intent; His eager body quivers. Suddenly he begins to run from the group, flying over the green grass, his legs carrying him faster and faster.

You have been spotted, and when you and your special friend finally meet, you cling together in joyous reunion, never to be parted again. The happy kisses rain upon your face; your hands again caress the beloved head, and you look once more into the trusting eyes of your pet, so long gone from your life but never absent from your heart.

Then you cross Rainbow Bridge together….

Author unknown…

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