calliecritturs
Posted : 12/24/2009 6:04:27 PM
Demodex is very common in bostons (it is in *all* bully and bracheocephalic breeds). I've helped literally thousands of people so if you want to email me I'll send you my article (no, I don't sell anything - it's just a bit more holistic way of treating that works well).
However, as to your instant problem -- this honestly sounds to me like a dog with a urinary tract problem. And yes, it could have come with her because a dog with such a problem may ultimately lie in their own urine (not in their crate but elsewhere) and re-infect with the same bacteria over and over. But a dog that marks all over the place may be marking, or it may simply be going very frequently. It *is* worth a serious vet check (not just a strip test -- but an actual urinalysis to see if there are casts, stones or crystals).
From there -- a couple of questions:
1. Does this dog **ever** go in front of you? When you are outside, does the dog "hide" to go -- OFTEN rescues wind up scared to 'go' in front of a human and if they get interrupted or don't finish or can't figure out how to complete it without you SEEING them they will wait until they can ditch you (usually once inside) and go somewhere else she has successfully elminated before.
You have to get tricky with a long leash and a mirror usually -- to "catch" her when she goes and at that **instant** tell her how great she is -- we just discussed this on another thread, but it's always my feeling that waiting to 'treat' when they go out takes too long and I don't think they 'get' it immediately enough.
2. How do you contain her inside? I would have this gal leashed TO me. *all* the time -- and with a short enough leash that I would feel the tug if she stopped to squat or move in any way.
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For housetraining, tho -- I usually move their accidents outside. I soak up urine and pick up *** and take the paper OUTSIDE and lay it down. Then clear up completely (and if she's actually marking then you likely need to be using something far deeper to clean with). But then take her *on leash* outside and show her that you've **moved** her waste. It belongs *here* ... not IN my house.
But honestly, in my house she would have ZERO freedom of movement until you get a handle on the house-training. You have to keep track of her every second to 'catch' her.