Although these breeds are easy to train and are known to be gentle with children, every dog needs to go through the basics of housebreaking. There are methods that owners can use to housebreak their Dogos. One is confinement and the second is availability and access to the outdoors. Unless owners are engaged with their dogos, the dog would find any possible space to relieve himself. In the living room, bedroom or even in the kitchen.

Confinement can take the form of a crate which restricts the dog for wetting his own sleeping space. Owners can see them run in circles needing to relieve themselves. An exercise cage is bigger for movement where using newspapers or a liter box can be used for training them. For the Dogo to enjoy some autonomy, having a doggy dog installed for him to exit to the yard would be great. Plus owners can rest easy knowing the Dogo knows where to go. These methods are only effective if owners spend enough time and patience with their Dogos.
Want to house train your puppy, but don’t have the time?
With the Complete 7 Day Potty Training Guide you can house train your dog in just 7 days. Here are just some of the issues the potty training guide deals with.
- The best time to start training
- List of best equipment and supplies
- Training older dogs
- How to use potty pads
- Crate training
- How to train dogs from rescue shelters
- What to do about marking
- Litter box training
- Effective paper training
- Leaving your dog home alone.
Beyond these, you will find answers to all of your questions about potty training in this comprehensive guide.
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