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Has your pet left "scent
marks" of urination and/or defecation on your floor or furniture? To
successfully re-train your pet to avoid those areas, follow these basic
steps:
- Find all soiled areas using
your nose and eyes. A black-light bulb will usually show even old urine
stains. Turn out all lights in the room; use the black-light to identify
soiled areas and lightly outline the areas with chalk.
- Clean the soiled areas
appropriately to remove the odors (see below).
- Make the areas unattractive
and/or unavailable.
- Make the appropriate "bathroom"
area attractive (see our handouts regarding
positive reinforcement,
house soiling and/or litter
box issues).
- Teach your pet the appropriate
place to eliminate by using positive reinforcement (see our handouts
mentioned above).
These steps work as a team! In
order for your efforts to be successful, you need to follow all of these
steps. If you fail to completely clean the area, your other re-training
efforts will be useless. As long as your pet can smell that personal
scent, he’ll continue to return to the "accident zone." Even if you can’t
smell traces of urine, your pet can. Your most important chore is to
remove (neutralize) that odor.
Methods To Avoid
You should avoid using steam
cleaners to clean urine odors from carpet or upholstery. The heat will
permanently set the odor and the stain by bonding the protein into any
man-made fibers. You should also avoid using cleaning chemicals,
especially those with strong odors, such as ammonia or vinegar. From your
pet’s perspective, these don’t effectively eliminate or cover the urine
odor and may actually encourage your pet’s inclination to reinforce the
urine scent mark in that area.
To Clean Washable Items
- Machine wash as usual, adding a
one pound box of baking soda to your regular detergent. If possible,
it’s best to air dry these items.
- If you can still see the stain
or smell the urine, machine wash the item again and add an enzymatic
cleaner. Be sure to follow the directions carefully.
- During the re-training period,
a good way to discourage your pet from using the bedding is to cover the
bed with a vinyl, flannel-backed tablecloth. They’re machine washable,
inexpensive and unattractive to your pet.
To Clean Carpeted Areas and Upholstery
- Soak up as much of the urine as
possible with a combination of newspaper and paper towels. The more
fresh urine you can remove before it dries, especially from carpet, the
simpler it will be to remove the odor. Place a thick layer of paper
towels on the wet spot and cover that with a thick layer of newspaper.
Stand on this padding for about a minute. Remove the padding and repeat
the process until the area is barely damp.
- If possible, take the fresh,
urine-soaked paper towel to the area where it belongs -- your cat’s
litterbox or your dog’s designated outdoor "bathroom area" -- and let
your pet see you do it. Don’t act angry when you do this, but try to
project a "happy" attitude to your pet. This will help to remind your
pet that eliminating isn’t a "bad" behavior as long as it’s done in the
right place.
- Rinse the "accident zone"
thoroughly with clean, cool water. After rinsing, remove as much
of the water as possible by blotting or by using a "wet-vac," "shop-vac"
or "extractor."
- If you’ve previously used
cleaners or chemicals of any kind on the area, then neutralizing
cleaners won’t be effective until you’ve rinsed every trace of the old
cleaner from the carpet. Even if you haven’t used chemicals recently,
any trace of a non-protein-based substance will weaken the effect of the
enzymatic cleaner. The cleaner will use up its "energy" on the old
cleaners instead of on the protein stains you want removed.
- To remove all traces of old
chemicals and clean old or heavy stains in carpeting, consider renting
an extractor or wet-vac from a local hardware store. This machine
operates much like a vacuum cleaner and is efficient and economical.
Extracting/wet-vac machines do the best job of forcing clean water
through your carpet and then forcing the dirty water back out again.
When using these machines or cleaners, be sure to follow the
instructions carefully. Don’t use any chemicals with these machines –
they work much more effectively with plain water.
- Once the area is really clean,
you should use a high-quality pet odor neutralizer available at pet
supply stores. Test the affected surface for staining first, and read
and follow the instructions.
- If the area still looks stained
after it’s completely dry from extracting and neutralizing, try any good
carpet stain remover.
- If urine has soaked down into
the padding underneath your carpet, your job will be more difficult. You
may need to remove and replace that portion of the carpet and padding.
- Using the suggestions in our
positive reinforcement and
housetraining handouts, make the
"accident zone" unattractive, the appropriate "bathroom" area
attractive, and teach your pet where you want him to eliminate, instead.
The re-training period may take a week or more. Remember, it took time
to build the bad habit, and it will take time to replace that habit with
a new, more acceptable behavior. Treat your pet with patience and give
him a lot of encouragement!
To Clean Floors and Walls
If the wood on your furniture,
walls, baseboard or floor is discolored, the varnish or paint has
been affected by the acid in the urine. You may need to remove and replace
the layer of varnish or paint. Employees at your local hardware or
building supply store can help you identify and match your needs with
appropriate removers and replacements. Washable enamel paints and some
washable wallpapers, may respond favorably to enzymatic cleaners. Read the
instructions carefully before using these products and test them in an
invisible area. |