Skip to content

Housetraining Pads… can they chew 'em?

Basenji Training
  • I am going out of town for a week and my older kids will be "in charge" of the dogs. They both work, so there will be several hours of each day when the dogs will be crated.
    Usually, when I leave the house, I put paper towels in Keoki's crate and he shreds it into confetti and pees everywhere.
    I'd like to put housetraining pads in there instead, but is there any danger if he should shred – and possibly ingest -- some of the pads?

    It just takes so many paper towels, and I think we could use fewer of the pads.

  • @JazzysMom:

    I am going out of town for a week and my older kids will be "in charge" of the dogs. They both work, so there will be several hours of each day when the dogs will be crated.
    Usually, when I leave the house, I put paper towels in Keoki's crate and he shreds it into confetti and pees everywhere.
    I'd like to put housetraining pads in there instead, but is there any danger if he should shred – and possibly ingest -- some of the pads?

    It just takes so many paper towels, and I think we could use fewer of the pads.

    Most of them have plastic backing… I would be very concerned with these is they were to shred.... and possible ingest...

  • Dash has ingested them before without any negative effects except poop with pee pee pad in it:D

  • hmmm….I don't know...I dont think I would trust it. The idea behind those pads is to be absorbant, so if the material is ingested, it might absorb liquid in the gut and swell up...not to mention the chemical reaction that might occur in the stomach/intestines.

    I would just keep using lots of paper. We are in the same boat with Ariel...she is our first shredder/eater of all fabric bedding...Querk shreds but doesn't eat....so she is stuck with paper, or cardboard.

  • @Quercus:

    hmmm….I don't know...I dont think I would trust it. The idea behind those pads is to be absorbant, so if the material is ingested, it might absorb liquid in the gut and swell up...not to mention the chemical reaction that might occur in the stomach/intestines.

    I would just keep using lots of paper. We are in the same boat with Ariel...she is our first shredder/eater of all fabric bedding...Querk shreds but doesn't eat....so she is stuck with paper, or cardboard.

    I guess I should add we didn't use it long because it was just as messy as nothing at all. Since he shredded it 2 minutes after we put it in there it wasn't useful for the pee anyway. So I don't exactly have long term use experience. Quercus has a good point. I didn't think about possible swelling.

  • I don't put anything in Daisy's crate with her anymore. She destroys and makes a mess out of everything I have given for her comfort. So I figure she doesn't need these things. She lays on the plastic tray that came with the crate. I do however give her a biscuit and sometimes a kong to chew, but I think she just lays down and sleeps. Later on maybe in the fall/winter, I'll try an old blanket or comforter. She just might appreciate it when the weather becomes colder. I had done the same last year when Duke was Daisy's age (7 months now), and I was surprised that when I did give him a blanket that it mostly stayed in tact. He has a nice comfy dog bed in his crate now. He hasn't tried to de-stuff it . . . yet.

  • I should add that she HAS urinated in the crate a couple times and unfortunately, when I got home, it had dried up. Daisy and the room smelled of urine. :eek: Daisy got a bath. The tray slides out and is easily sprayed off with a hose outside and finished with Lysol disinfectant wipes. This happened only twice. Often, my sister-in-law comes to the house for lunch and lets my dogs outside. Daisy seems to be getting stronger bladder control.

  • Keoki has two cozy pads to sleep on at night, and he doesn't bother them at all. It's just the day time. I take those out and put in a bunch of paper towels.

    Sigh, I guess I'll just keep investing in the paper towel companies. LOL
    I have debated not giving him anything, but they at least absorb some of the pee so he's not splashing around in it.
    I just don't think my kids are going to do a great job cleaning it up, and then his bedding will be put in there at night. ew and ugh.

  • We use lots of newspaper….much cheaper than papertowels...but not quite as absorbant. I have thought about using cardboard boxes....

  • @Quercus:

    We use lots of newspaper….much cheaper than papertowels...but not quite as absorbant. I have thought about using cardboard boxes....

    If they "eat" cardboard can ball up and cause a blockage… have seen it happen.... especially the glued parts....

    Newspaper is good and you can usually go to a print shop and get the ends of rolls of blank paper... then you don't have to put up with the newsprint

  • Yeah, so far she hasn't eaten paper …and I have put in a little cardboard, and she doesn't seem to have eaten that. But, wow, has she eaten and pooped out a lot of fabric! I have never seen a dog eat so many tiny pieces of blanket!

    Good point about the cardboard blockage though....sometimes I forget they aren't gorillas ;)

  • Ahhh, newspaper. Duh @ me. LOL Why didn't I think of that a long, long time ago?

    I may give that a try. Thanks!

  • Poor Daisy gets nothing . . . Hope you all don't think I'm mean, but even if there is urine soaked newspaper or paper towel, there is still an unsanitary mess to clean - right? Wicked puddles would be better than not. I really fear that Daisy would eat the paper towel. I'll try it and see what she does, next time she's crated.

  • <>
    I don't think you're mean :) I just think it is easier to clean up the pee when it has been absorbed some. And there are many, many times were she doesn't pee, and the newspaper offers some comfort to lie on.

  • I'm one of those folks who advises against using puppy wee wee pads in crates, period. The pads are impregnated with a scent to entice the dog to relieve themselves and thus it could teach the dog to relieve itself in the crate. Newspapers are an affordable and relatively safe bedding. You can buy rolls of unprinted newspaper at the newspaper printers. These are solid white and thus do not leave ugly grey all over a Basenji's pretty white feet.

  • I bought a pad today for Keoki that is guaranteed to not be tear-able. If he tears it w/in the first 7 days, we get our money back.

    I put it in for the drive home and Keoki curled right up and went to sleep. Usually he shreds and whines in the car. So maybe…. {or maybe he was just exhausted from his big day}.
    Anyway, we'll see what happens.

  • LOL Got my money back this morning for the "indestructable" crate pad. hee hee Keoki had it torn in three places in the hour it took us to drive back for the second day of the show. ha ha….

  • @JazzysMom:

    LOL Got my money back this morning for the "indestructable" crate pad. hee hee Keoki had it torn in three places in the hour it took us to drive back for the second day of the show. ha ha….

    Ha, ha! I did the same thing many years ago with Querk at a show….we bought it, put it in his crate on the way to the hotel. By the time we got there it was trash...the next day I took it back to the guy and dumped it out on the floor of his booth ;)

  • This guy was really chatty yesterday, showing photos of his dogs {Am. Bull dogs} and making all sorts of small talk.

    Hmmmm, wasn't so happy to see me today. LOL

  • Cairo is 7months now and will unstuff toys (not eat) and will eat pieces of towels if I put them in the crate. I think it is just a stage that they pass through with age.

    I like the gray padding/ bedding that fits the shape of the kennel exactly. If they have an accident, it absorbs in, they can only destuff the edges and cant tear it apart.

    I think the towels are kinda a sucking chewing thing.

    The pads (at Petsmart) are super easy to throw in the washer for the occasional accident.

    Puppy pads have a particular scent which helps puppys know where to go to release themselves. I would not suggest using this in the kennel because you may be working against yourself with potty training.

    Typically my guys may have accidents, but they are usually pretty upset about it when I get home. Almost like they are embarrased.

    Caesar even taught himself to drink less in the morning to stop having accidents while I was at work. He guzzled water as a puppy.

Suggested Topics

  • Chew deterrent

    Basenji Training
    3
    0 Votes
    3 Posts
    2k Views
    KipawaK
    Kipawa despises bitter apple. Twice a week I soak down my seatbelt in the car (which he can reach from behind the barrier). Works like a charm. Last year I sprayed it on a few things in a hotel room we were in. When we left, there was still a perfect white duvet on the bed. :)
  • Can't seem to get it right

    Basenji Training
    33
    0 Votes
    33 Posts
    12k Views
    Buddys PalB
    Well, it does sound like you are doing the best. This is just a forum and the info given and then taken into action on your part may be miles away because they (we) are not living right there…. Just keep up the best that you are doing. Wish you all the best....it can be frustrating beyond what we would understand because the situation you have with Basil is similar BUT WAAAAY different then we ever had;;;;we never had Basil!!!!!!!!! I am (we are?) behind you and wish you good luck. It is a handful. Knowing you get on the forum to vent is why it exists I guess....Take the info and apply it as best you can before the behaviorist or trainer gets involved. Remember, dogs, even Basenjis can learn something all over again with the correct input-HANG IN THERE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Kudos!!!:)
  • First time 'off leash'

    Basenji Training
    28
    0 Votes
    28 Posts
    11k Views
    lvossL
    What is a "training leash"? Is it a long line? Long lines are great for teaching loose lead walking and working on recalls. Many people seem to think that walking a dog off leash is a good thing, when in reality it is in most places breaking the law. There are some places that you can walk your dog off leash without being in violation of the law but in many places there are not many safe places that you can walk your dog off leash. As Janneke said, a real benefit to working on a long line on recall is that if your pup ever does get out then you have a tool to get him back. Name response, coming to his name with various distractions and in various places could very well save his life some day. You can play the come game in the house having people in different rooms call his name and give a treat if he comes. You can work on a long line outside calling him between two people. Only treat if he comes when called not if he is just running back and forth between you. As for him listening to you, are you taking him to training classes? What is your role in training him? The more you work him, and the more consistently you work him, the more he will listen to you. You can start really by just taking a handful of one of his meals and just ask for some basics before giving him the main meal. Sit, down, stand, I practice targeting, what ever you may be working on until you have used your handful then when you are done ask for a sit and then you can give his bowl.
  • Can he stop?

    Basenji Training
    27
    0 Votes
    27 Posts
    9k Views
    JannekeJ
    Haha, jah, nooit geschoten, is altijd mis ;) Today we had Mirtillo walking loose, but with his leach still attach to his collar. This worked very well. When he doesn't feel like coming, we just run away from him and then he thinks it's a game and follows. I hope we will find a fenced place like that. It sounds great. May I ask you from which breeder you got Gaia?
  • Poopin' in the crate…

    Basenji Training
    8
    0 Votes
    8 Posts
    3k Views
    youngandtiredY
    Sounds like a typical B to me with the pooping on the B training manual. You sure you don't have my B, she is quite smart also. Be patient your B will get the idea, and being home next week so you can work with her/him will help. They are very smart, my B learned pretty fast, and when she would go outside I always gave her a treat that she liked. You have to have the treat in your pocket and give it right away after he/she goes to potty, they only remember 30sec. after the fact. Good Luck!
  • Its the constant chewing…...

    Basenji Training
    17
    0 Votes
    17 Posts
    7k Views
    firefoxkatanF
    Bindi gently chews on my fingers while we play, sleep, sit on the couch I figured it was like a baby sucking on their thumb should I stop her while she's still young as it might be a problem when she's older? or will she grow out of 'sucking my thumb'? I know some people say, don't let them 'bite' even if it's gentle because they might bite harder later in life? I have some toys and I try 'trade ya' and sometimes she just gets so frustrated that she can't chew on what ever she was trying to and 'umph's and rolls over lol I find her chewing on my bedding most of the time :/ and when she's in bed there's no toys to trade with ~Kat