You may have heard that approximate rule comparing ‘dog years’ to human years. As a result, once your pooch is one whole human year old, you might consider them to be a teenager in dog years - around 15 depending on their breed.
So, once your new pup is just a few weeks old, they’ll be the equivalent of 1 year old in dog years - exciting! How will you celebrate their birthday? Perhaps by giving them a special treat or taking them on their favourite walk?
You probably have already started spending time together, and you’re both beginning to get to know each other’s personalities: what should your pup start learning and how can you help them with their training?
There's no time to lose!
You will shortly master the basics of puppy training and this will help your pup’s confidence. Puppy classes are an excellent way to train your pup and help them to learn and develop into a confident, outgoing dog. Puppy schools are designed for pups aged 8 to 16 weeks old and are a fun way to bond with your puppy during their most important developmental period - as well as providing the opportunity for your pet to experience new environments and other dogs.
As your pup gets used to experiencing new places and realizes that they don’t need to be scared, this will boost their confidence. Being rewarded for dealing with situations well will help your pup make positive associations - for example, when meeting new people, strangers, and other new puppy friends. In the future, this positive association will create calm reactions and leave you with a confident dog in any environment.
The socialization phase is such an important stage for your puppy. This is where your pup will learn to perceive situations, kids, people, animal, transport, crates, sounds etc. as normal and not something scary. You should expose your pup to many different situations and environments in a safe, controlled, and calm way. Reward relaxed, calm responses, or even no response at all, to something new.
As well as socializing your dog, make sure that you provide regular training sessions too; even though lots of different training sessions take time and patience, the hard work will pay off and it is very important that you continue. Follow the pup-training golden rules: keep sessions short but repeat often, reward good behaviour, never punish your pup, and be patient as well as consistent - make sure the whole family is on board with their training! Support your pup so that they learn that the situations they’ll encounter in modern daily life are normal and nothing to worry about.