Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

PEEING ON HIS BED.

EVERY MONTH MAYBE 2 TO 3 TIMES OUT OF THIS MONTH IF HE THE DOG DOESNT RECIEVE ATTENTION LIKE HE USUALLY RECIEVES HE WILL RELEAVE HIMSELF ON HIS OWN BED AND HE ONLY DOES THIS WHEN I DONT HAVE TIME TO PLAY WITH AT TIMES I NEED TO WORK AND I COME HOME TIRED AND HIS AREA IS DRY AND AS SOON AS I COME IN HE PEE'S AND HE KNOWS WE ARE GOING OUT FOR OUR DAILY WALK WHEN I GET HOME SO WHY WOULD HE DO THIS THIS REALLY ANGERS ME.
4 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Avatar universal
yes your reply was very helpfull and made alot of sense and he is a very well trained dog he listens and obeys all my commands except for this little problem but i love him to death ive had him since he was 4 weeks old i bottle feed him,so his my luv, but this peeing drives me nuts but you could be right that he does pee in his bed cuz he knows it upsets me when he goes on the carpet or any other place in the house..wow you made some good sense...do you think i should give him a pal so he wont be so lonely? and thanks for your response have a good one...peace
Helpful - 1
Avatar universal
A lot of times dogs will anticipate that walk and get over excited, if they have to urinate it will just come out because they are thinking about that walk and urinating.  It may be more of a automatic response that the dog is not always able to control, especially if he can not get in and out to urinate when he wants.  Dogs are very teritorial and he knows that that is his bed and that urine in the house makes you upset so when he gets over excited he wants to make sure he messes on his own territory and not yours.  I hope this helps it sounds like you have a great dog there.
Helpful - 1
Avatar universal
MEDICAL PROFESSIONAL
Have a blood panel and urinalysis run to eliminate behavioral issues. If they return normally then talk to your veterinarian and/or a behaviorist to help you resolve your dogs behavioral issue.
Dr Carol Osborne, DVM
Helpful - 1
Avatar universal
DR OSBORNE, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR YOUR REPLY,I WONDER SOME TIMES IF I SHOULD GET HIM A PAL SO HE WONT BE LONELY WHEN IM AT WORK..OR IS THIS A BAD IDEA..BUT IVE MADE AN OPP. TO RUN THE TEST THAT YOU HAVE ASK THEN FROM THERE I CAN FIQUER OUT WHY HE DOES THIS.DR. IS IT A BAD IDEA NOT TO HAVE HIM FIXED SINCE HE WILL NEVER REALLY BE ABLE TO GET TO ANOTHER DOG BECAUSE HIS ALWAYS IN THE HOUSE OR ON LEASH WHEN WE WALK?I FEEL THERE IS NO NEED FOR IT BUT THEN AGAIN IM NOT A DR. AS YOU ARE.AGAIN THANK YOU'
Helpful - 0

You are reading content posted in the Animal Health - General Forum

Popular Resources
Members of our Pet Communities share their Halloween pet photos.
Has your pet ever swallowed your prescription medicine? Vet tech Thomas Dock explores the top 10 meds that harm pets and what you can do to prevent a tragedy from happening.
Like to travel but hate to leave your pooch at home? Dr. Carol Osborne talks tips on how (and where!) to take a trip with your pampered pet
A list of national and international resources and hotlines to help connect you to needed health and medical services.
Herpes sores blister, then burst, scab and heal.
Herpes spreads by oral, vaginal and anal sex.