Hello everyone,

 

Today is my first day being an official corgi owner/lover. I picked up the cutest tri male corgi which is about 7 weeks old.

Breeder was from a small town an hour north of dallas so we had to drive all the way from houston for the little guy. His name is Kobi, both his parents where tri's and lived in a farm w/ a family that had a family of corgis lol. 

 

At first he was shy but after we arrived home, he would start crying as soon as we leave his sight. :) too cute.

 

Anyways, just a quick question. My g/f and I currently live in an indoor style apartment. (gotta walk to corner of the building to take stairs to go outside). And well we decided to use training pads to use the bathroom. We wanna designate the balcony as the designated spot he needs to go too. But when we sat him outside after he ate/drink he didnt do anything. But as soon as he got inside he pee'd. Should i just start laying pads at random places til he gets acquainted to use the pads to poop and pee?

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Congratulations:P

I'm still on the waiting wagon xD

But as far as the puppy pad, I think I would keep it in one spot so he knows WHERE to go, not that he can just go anywhere.. Just be consistant-the first time you take a puppy outside to your backyard, they don't always go to the bathroom.. So I wouldn't apply anything special other than reinforcing that the puppy goes outside to go potty, ON the puppy pad. Good luck! He's really adoooorable.

Oh my word is he adorable! Brings back wonderful memories of when Noodles was a puppy. We never used potty pads, so I have no advice, but I wanted to let you know how adorable your little Kobi is. Enjoy the wonderful memories with him.

He is so precious!  Congratulations on a new addition to your family.  Keep posting your great pictures of Kobi!

I would recommend keeping the pad(s) in the same spot.  You can find lots of useful links (like this one) in the FAQ and through general forum searches.  

 

The way I would handle it is to keep the pads in just the balcony area.  If you spread the pads around your house, then he will start to associate your house with going potty.  You definitely don't want him to start thinking it's okay to do his business inside.  If he is crate trained, then keep him crated after eating/drinking for about 10-15 minutes and then take him out to the pads.  If he goes, great!  Reward with treats (if you wish), affection and freedom to explore and play in his new home (supervised!)  If he doesn't do his business, then put him back into his crate for 5-10 minutes and then try again.  Most likely it will be a few months before he consistently uses only the pads.

 

For any peeing/pooping in areas you don't want him to use (your living room rug, kitchen floor, etc.), be sure to clean the area with an enzyme spray specifically made to handle urine and stool.  That way it will remove any scent that our own noses aren't sensitive enough to detect.

Good idea.

 

 

Ive been searching for puppy pad training, all have been the same concept but different ideas, getting us confused.

 

I wish i had easy access to grass, training to go outside was a easier solution :(

Well, they do have these sort of "litter boxes for dogs" where it's just some dirt and grass in a rectangular pan and people train the pups to go on that instead.  I have no experience with those, but it would be a similar concept as the pads.  Here's one that I found on a  quick search.  There are more than just that one brand available, but maybe that would be easier for you?

 

The thing of it is, the ideas around using a puppy pad and going on the lawn are the same.  Dogs of any age do not want to pee or poop where they sleep.  A puppy doesn't understand that your living room or kitchen are part of their home.  You want to restrict freedom until you're fairly certain he will pee or poop.  This, of course, varies from dog to dog, but puppies generally have to go within 10-30 minutes of eating or drinking.  They're small, so it's literally in one end and out the other.  ;)

 

It's important to have lots of successful attempts in the beginning so that he associates going on the pad as a good thing.  How you go about it will depend on your own situation.  Some people don't want to crate train and so they run their pup outside every 5 minutes until he/she goes potty.  I, personally, can't do that with Ellie because I have 2 small children.  I opted to crate her (since she was fairly well crate trained when I got her) and it has worked really well.  At six months, her "accidents" are uncommon and she is allowed to roam the downstairs freely once she has done her business in the morning.

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