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    <title>Obedience Training on PetCare — Honest Dog Product Reviews &amp; Care Tips</title>
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      <title>How to Train a Dachshund: Positive Reinforcement Guide</title>
      <link>https://petcare.nxtniche.com/posts/2026-06-27-petcare/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://petcare.nxtniche.com/posts/2026-06-27-petcare/</guid>
      <description>A complete guide to training your stubborn dachshund with positive reinforcement. Covers puppy potty training, loose leash walking, and adult obedience.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="affiliate-block">
<p><em>Disclosure: Some links below are affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. If you buy through them, I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products I've personally used with my dachshund.</em></p>
</div>
<h2 id="the-dachshund-training-paradox">The Dachshund Training Paradox</h2>
<p>So the day Oscar learned &ldquo;sit&rdquo; he was exactly 10 weeks old. And I was ecstatic — I&rsquo;d finally cracked the code. But the next morning, he looked me dead in the eye when I said &ldquo;sit,&rdquo; held my gaze, and slowly lay down instead. That was my first lesson in training a dachshund: they&rsquo;re not disobedient. They&rsquo;re testing whether you&rsquo;re worth listening to. Oscar and I have been negotiating ever since.</p>
<p>If you&rsquo;re reading this because your dachshund is giving you that side-eye, or because you&rsquo;re on your fifth potty accident today — you&rsquo;re not doing it wrong. Look, dachshund training isn&rsquo;t about breaking their will. It&rsquo;s about channeling it. But these dogs were bred to hunt badgers, alone, underground. They don&rsquo;t do blind obedience. They do &ldquo;what&rsquo;s in it for me?&rdquo;</p>
<p>And the answer to that question is what this guide is about.</p>
<h2 id="understanding-the-dachshund-brain-why-your-doxie-isnt-broken">Understanding the Dachshund Brain (Why Your Doxie Isn&rsquo;t Broken)</h2>
<p>But before I talk about methods, let&rsquo;s talk about what&rsquo;s going on inside that long head.</p>
<p><strong>The badger hunter&rsquo;s persistence.</strong> Now, dachshunds were bred to track down badgers — animals twice their size with claws like gardening tools — and flush them out. That takes problem-solving, courage, and the kind of stubbornness that makes a Labrador look like a pushover. So when your dachshund ignores you to chase a smell, they&rsquo;re not being naughty. They&rsquo;re doing what 300 years of breeding tells them to do.</p>
<p><strong>Selective hearing = hunting focus.</strong> &ldquo;He hears me when I open the cheese drawer but not when I call his name&rdquo; — I&rsquo;ve seen this exact complaint on r/Dachshund more times than I can count. Still, it&rsquo;s not selective hearing loss. It&rsquo;s selective attention. And your dachshund heard you perfectly. They just decided the squirrel outside was more interesting.</p>
<p><strong>The negotiation mindset.</strong> Every command a dachshund follows goes through this internal filter: &ldquo;What do I get out of this?&rdquo; It&rsquo;s not because they don&rsquo;t love you. My Oscar sleeps curled against my neck every night and cries when I leave for work. But in a training context, love doesn&rsquo;t override instinct. Motivation does.</p>
<p>The takeaway: if you understand that your dachshund isn&rsquo;t &ldquo;bad&rdquo; — they&rsquo;re just wired differently — your entire training approach shifts from frustration to strategy.</p>
<h2 id="training-philosophy-motivation-over-domination">Training Philosophy: Motivation Over Domination</h2>
<p>Look, dominance theory fails with dachshunds. It just does. If you try to alpha-roll a dachshund they&rsquo;ll either (a) scream like you&rsquo;re murdering them, or (b) dig their heels in deeper and then plot their revenge. And I&rsquo;m not exaggerating — dachshunds hold grudges.</p>
<p>Still, positive reinforcement isn&rsquo;t &ldquo;soft&rdquo; training. It&rsquo;s the only method that works with an independent breed that was designed to make decisions on its own. But here&rsquo;s what took me a while to learn: it doesn&rsquo;t mean you&rsquo;re permissive. It means you&rsquo;re strategic.</p>
<h3 id="the-reward-hierarchy">The Reward Hierarchy</h3>
<p>Not all treats are created equal in the dachshund world.</p>
<table>
	<thead>
			<tr>
					<th style="text-align: center">Reward Level</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Examples</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Best Use Case</th>
			</tr>
	</thead>
	<tbody>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: center">Low value</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Regular kibble (a few pieces)</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Home practice of known commands, name game</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: center">Medium value</td>
					<td style="text-align: left"><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0184817SI?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Bil-Jac Little Jacs</a> (&lt; 2 cal each)</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Daily training, potty training, general reinforcement</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: center">High value</td>
					<td style="text-align: left"><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D3MGW5KW?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Clifford Training Treats</a> (chicken/freeze-dried)</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Recall, &ldquo;leave it,&rdquo; high-distraction environments</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: center">Alternative</td>
					<td style="text-align: left"><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CFMDJQ9L?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Open Farm Good Bites</a></td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Owners who want limited-ingredient/natural options</td>
			</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
<p>Now, I use Bil-Jac Little Jacs for 90% of Oscar&rsquo;s daily training — at less than 2 calories per treat, I can run through 30 reps without overfeeding. But when we&rsquo;re at the dog park and I need a rock-solid &ldquo;come&rdquo; while he&rsquo;s chasing a squirrel? That&rsquo;s Clifford territory.</p>
<h2 id="life-stage-training-map">Life Stage Training Map</h2>
<h3 id="stage-1-puppy-816-weeks--the-foundation-window">Stage 1: Puppy (8–16 Weeks) — The Foundation Window</h3>
<h4 id="weeks-12-name-recognition--crate-introduction">Weeks 1–2: Name Recognition + Crate Introduction</h4>
<p>So start on day one. Say your puppy&rsquo;s name, and the moment they look at you — even by accident — mark with &ldquo;yes&rdquo; and drop a treat. And within a few days, their name becomes a cue that means &ldquo;look at me, good stuff coming.&rdquo;</p>
<p>And for crate training, don&rsquo;t close the door on day one. Leave it open, toss treats inside, let your puppy wander in and out on their own terms. Oscar walked into his crate on day 3 to check if there was a peanut butter KONG waiting. By day 7, he&rsquo;d put himself to bed in it at 9 PM. That&rsquo;s the goal — the crate becomes a den, not a cage.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0002AR15U?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">KONG Classic Small</a> with frozen peanut butter inside is my go-to crate association tool. Keeps them busy, builds positive feelings, and buys you 20 minutes of peace. (I wrote a full <a href="/kong-classic-small-dachshund-quick-review-2026/">KONG Classic Small Quick Review</a> if you want the details on why this specific size works best for doxies.) <em>(affiliate link)</em></p>
<h4 id="weeks-36-potty-training">Weeks 3–6: Potty Training</h4>
<p>Here&rsquo;s the hard truth about dachshund potty training: their bladders are tiny and their stubbornness is huge. Most generic guides say &ldquo;take your puppy out every 2 hours.&rdquo; So with a dachshund, make it every 60 to 90 minutes. Yes, including at night.</p>
<p><strong>The cold/rain problem.</strong> Dachshunds hate wet grass. This is the #1 obstacle to potty training a doxie. They&rsquo;ll hold it for hours rather than step on cold damp ground — then pee on your rug the second they get back inside. So don&rsquo;t let them back in until they go. Stand there. Wait. Bring treats. And when they finally go — treat explosion with Bil-Jac.</p>
<p>I took Oscar out every 90 minutes for the first two weeks, even during the night. And yes, I was exhausted. But by week four, he was signaling at the door. The dachshund who supposedly &ldquo;can&rsquo;t be potty trained&rdquo; was trained in a month.</p>
<p>But one rule: never punish accidents. Dachshunds hold grudges. And if you yell at them for peeing on the carpet, they learn to hide from you when they pee — not to stop peeing indoors. So clean it up, move on, take them out more frequently.</p>
<h4 id="weeks-58-sit-down-stay-basics">Weeks 5–8: Sit, Down, Stay Basics</h4>
<p>So use the luring method: hold a treat at their nose, slowly move it up and back over their head — their butt naturally drops into a sit. Mark and reward. And for down, lure from sit position straight down to the floor.</p>
<p>And keep sessions to 2-3 minutes. Dachshund puppies have attention spans measured in seconds, not minutes. Always end on a success — if they&rsquo;re getting distracted, go back to something easy so they finish feeling like a genius. So keep it short, keep it fun, and end before they lose interest.</p>
<h3 id="stage-2-adolescent-412-months--the-testing-phase">Stage 2: Adolescent (4–12 Months) — The Testing Phase</h3>
<p><strong>The regression is real.</strong></p>
<p>Look, Oscar at 5 months was perfect. Perfect recall, perfect sit-stay, walked like a gentleman. But at 7 months, he looked at me like he&rsquo;d never heard &ldquo;sit&rdquo; in his life. I nearly cried. Turns out, this is totally normal for adolescent dachshunds.</p>
<p>So the strategy: increase reward value, decrease session length, and triple your consistency. Your dachshund is testing boundaries — the same way a teenager does. Don&rsquo;t take it personally.</p>
<h4 id="loose-leash-walking-the-doxie-method">Loose Leash Walking (The Doxie Method)</h4>
<p>So traditional &ldquo;stop when they pull&rdquo; doesn&rsquo;t work well with dachshunds. They&rsquo;ll just stand there and stare at you for 5 minutes, then try again. Here&rsquo;s what actually worked for Oscar:</p>
<ol>
<li>Arm yourself with high-value treats</li>
<li>The moment your dachshund looks back at you on the walk — mark and treat</li>
<li>Change direction frequently — they learn to watch you because you&rsquo;re unpredictable and interesting</li>
<li>Use a retractable leash in locked short mode for training</li>
</ol>
<p>The <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01EV1RXKI?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">FLEXI Comfort Retractable Leash</a> was a game changer. I kept it locked at 3 feet for training mode. If he pulled, I stopped. When he looked back at me, mark + treat + unlock a foot of leash. Over 2 weeks, he learned that &ldquo;walking near me = more freedom.&rdquo; At 8 months old, we could do a full 30-minute walk with maybe one or two stops.</p>
<h4 id="recall-the-most-important-and-hardest-dachshund-command">Recall: The Most Important (and Hardest) Dachshund Command</h4>
<p>So start indoors. No distractions → low-distraction yard → high-distraction park. This progression takes weeks, not days.</p>
<p><strong>Critical rule</strong>: NEVER call your dachshund for something they&rsquo;ll hate.</p>
<p>I made the mistake of calling Oscar for a bath once. And he came running, tail wagging, so happy I called him. Then I picked him up and put him in water. And it took 3 weeks to rebuild his recall. Now when it&rsquo;s bath time, I go get him — I don&rsquo;t call. &ldquo;Come&rdquo; must always, always predict good things: treats, play, praise.</p>
<p>Use your highest-value treats for recall training. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D3MGW5KW?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Clifford Training Treats</a> and <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CFMDJQ9L?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Open Farm Good Bites</a> are both solid options — I tested the <a href="/open-farm-training-treats-quick-review-2026/">Open Farm Be Good Bites</a> on Oscar and they&rsquo;re smelly enough to compete with whatever distraction is out there.</p>
<h4 id="leave-it--drop-it">Leave It / Drop It</h4>
<p>And dachshunds will eat literally everything off the ground. And their nose is too powerful. Oscar once found a dropped chicken wing on a walk, and the way he looked at me said &ldquo;this is my prey now.&rdquo;</p>
<p>So the trade-up method: start with something low-value in your hand. Say &ldquo;leave it.&rdquo; The moment they stop trying to get it — mark and reward with something better. Then gradually increase difficulty: on the floor, on a walk, near something genuinely dangerous like a chicken bone or a piece of chocolate.</p>
<h3 id="stage-3-adult-12-months--refinement-and-challenge">Stage 3: Adult (12 Months+) — Refinement and Challenge</h3>
<p>So once your dachshund has the basics, the goal shifts to generalization and fading treats.</p>
<p><strong>Intermittent reinforcement</strong> is your best friend. But random reward — sometimes a treat, sometimes enthusiastic praise, sometimes nothing — keeps the behavior strong because your dachshund never knows which &ldquo;sit&rdquo; will pay out. Like a slot machine for dogs.</p>
<h4 id="desensitization-training-nail-grinder">Desensitization Training (Nail Grinder)</h4>
<p>Here&rsquo;s where I messed up. So I waited until Oscar was 6 months old to start nail grinding. It was a disaster — full drama, Oscar the Magnificent-level betrayal performance. I spent a month doing desensitization. Start from puppy hood and it&rsquo;s a non-issue.</p>
<p>The protocol:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong>Week 1</strong>: Leave the Dremel on the floor. Toss treats near it. Let them sniff it.</li>
<li><strong>Week 2</strong>: Turn the Dremel on in another room while you feed treats. They associate the sound with good things.</li>
<li><strong>Week 3</strong>: Touch the (off) Dremel to their paw. Treat. Repeat until they&rsquo;re bored.</li>
<li><strong>Week 4</strong>: Quick brief touch while running. Treat explosion.</li>
<li><strong>Week 5+</strong>: Full nail grinding routine.</li>
</ol>
<p>The <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DJ3JR93D?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Dremel PawControl</a> is quiet and gentle enough for dog nails. My full <a href="/dremel-pawcontrol-quick-review-2026/">Dremel PawControl Quick Review</a> covers the desensitization process in more detail. Worth every penny if you can put in the prep work. Even so, if your dachshund is extra sensitive, start with a manual file — the sound is the biggest hurdle, not the sensation.</p>
<h4 id="separation-anxiety-foundations">Separation Anxiety Foundations</h4>
<p>But this isn&rsquo;t a full treatment guide — if your dog shows severe distress when left alone, please consult your vet or a professional behaviorist. Still, two things that helped Oscar:</p>
<p>First, the crate as safe space. Oscar&rsquo;s crate is never used for punishment. It&rsquo;s where the peanut butter KONG lives.</p>
<p>Second, a comfort object. The <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DG66VKS?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">KONG Cozie Alligator Small</a> lives in Oscar&rsquo;s crate. When I leave, he grabs it and takes it to his bed. It&rsquo;s his &ldquo;Oscar is home alone but not alone&rdquo; buddy. Many owners find it helpful for reducing anxiety symptoms during departures.</p>
<h2 id="troubleshooting-common-dachshund-training-problems">Troubleshooting: Common Dachshund Training Problems</h2>
<table>
	<thead>
			<tr>
					<th style="text-align: left">Problem</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Why It Happens</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">What Actually Works</th>
			</tr>
	</thead>
	<tbody>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Selective deafness</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Hunting focus — they&rsquo;re tracking a smell or sound</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Do attention-getting before giving commands: make a kissy sound, tap your leg, pat the floor</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Leash pulling</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Hunter instinct — they follow scent trails</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Direction-change method + FLEXI locked mode (see loose-leash section)</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Barking at visitors</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Territorial instinct + guard dog heritage</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Guest-entry routine: &ldquo;sit&rdquo; → &ldquo;wait&rdquo; → release to greet</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Eating everything off the ground</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Nose-driven 24/7</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">&ldquo;Leave it&rdquo; training with progressive difficulty — start in house, move to yard, then walks</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Potty training regression</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Environment change, stress, or medical issue</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Go back to basics. More frequent outings, more rewards. If persistent, check with your vet</td>
			</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
<h2 id="5-minute-daily-training-routine">5-Minute Daily Training Routine</h2>
<table>
	<thead>
			<tr>
					<th style="text-align: left">Exercise</th>
					<th style="text-align: center">Duration</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Notes</th>
			</tr>
	</thead>
	<tbody>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Name game + attention warm-up</td>
					<td style="text-align: center">1 min</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Say name, reward eye contact — sets the tone</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Known command review (sit/down/stay)</td>
					<td style="text-align: center">2 min</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Quickfire — 5 reps each, reward every other</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Current focus command (loose leash / leave it / etc.)</td>
					<td style="text-align: center">2 min</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Whatever you&rsquo;re currently working on</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Free play or scent game</td>
					<td style="text-align: center">1-2 min</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Let them win. Toss treats in the grass and let them &ldquo;hunt&rdquo; — mental stimulation</td>
			</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
<p>Dachshunds don&rsquo;t need hour-long training sessions. Their attention span is short, and they get bored with repetition. Five focused minutes every day beats 30 minutes once a week — and your doxie will agree.</p>
<h2 id="what-not-to-do-training-anti-patterns">What NOT to Do (Training Anti-Patterns)</h2>
<table>
	<thead>
			<tr>
					<th style="text-align: left">❌ Don&rsquo;t</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Why</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">✅ Do This Instead</th>
			</tr>
	</thead>
	<tbody>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Yell or punish</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Dachshunds hold grudges. Punishment makes them fearful, not obedient</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Ignore wrong behavior for 4 seconds, then redirect to something they know</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Repeat commands</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">&ldquo;Sit sit sit SIT SIT SIT&rdquo; teaches them the first 5 cues are optional</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Say it once. Wait 3 seconds. If no response, re-lure</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Punish after recall</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">&ldquo;Come here&rdquo; → punishment → they learn &ldquo;come&rdquo; is dangerous</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">&ldquo;Come&rdquo; always predicts good things. Bad things go get them yourself</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Wait too long to start training</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">8–16 weeks is the prime socialization window</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Start name game and crate introduction on day one</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Compare to other breeds</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Every dachshund learns at their own pace</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Celebrate small wins. Your dog isn&rsquo;t a Lab. That&rsquo;s the whole point</td>
			</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
<h2 id="bottom-line">Bottom Line</h2>
<p>Training a dachshund is different from training any other dog. It&rsquo;s not harder — it&rsquo;s just a different game. Your dachshund isn&rsquo;t broken because they don&rsquo;t obey like a Golden Retriever. They&rsquo;re doing exactly what they were bred to do: think for themselves.</p>
<p>The secret is understanding their motivation, working with their instincts instead of against them, and building a relationship based on trust — not dominance. Give your dachshund a reason to listen, and they&rsquo;ll surprise you.</p>
<p><em>For a complete list of everything you need before bringing your dachshund puppy home, check out our <a href="/">Dachshund Puppy Essentials Checklist</a> — it covers potty training setup, crate essentials, and the first-week supplies I wish someone had told me about.</em></p>
<p><em>Need the right leash setup? See our <a href="/">Dachshund Harness &amp; Leash Guide</a>.</em></p>
<p><em>Already using a Dremel? Read my full <a href="/">Dremel PawControl Quick Review</a>.</em></p>]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>How to Train a Dachshund: Positive Reinforcement Guide</title>
      <link>https://petcare.nxtniche.com/posts/how-to-train-a-dachshund-positive-reinforcement-guide/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://petcare.nxtniche.com/posts/how-to-train-a-dachshund-positive-reinforcement-guide/</guid>
      <description>A complete guide to training your stubborn dachshund with positive reinforcement. Covers puppy potty training, loose leash walking, and adult obedience.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. This guide contains affiliate links to products I&rsquo;ve personally used with my dachshund.</em></p>
<h2 id="the-dachshund-training-paradox">The Dachshund Training Paradox</h2>
<p>So the day Oscar learned &ldquo;sit&rdquo; he was exactly 10 weeks old. And I was ecstatic — I&rsquo;d finally cracked the code. But the next morning, he looked me dead in the eye when I said &ldquo;sit,&rdquo; held my gaze, and slowly lay down instead. That was my first lesson in training a dachshund: they&rsquo;re not disobedient. They&rsquo;re testing whether you&rsquo;re worth listening to. Oscar and I have been negotiating ever since.</p>
<p>If you&rsquo;re reading this because your dachshund is giving you that side-eye, or because you&rsquo;re on your fifth potty accident today — you&rsquo;re not doing it wrong. Look, dachshund training isn&rsquo;t about breaking their will. It&rsquo;s about channeling it. But these dogs were bred to hunt badgers, alone, underground. They don&rsquo;t do blind obedience. They do &ldquo;what&rsquo;s in it for me?&rdquo;</p>
<p>And the answer to that question is what this guide is about.</p>
<h2 id="understanding-the-dachshund-brain-why-your-doxie-isnt-broken">Understanding the Dachshund Brain (Why Your Doxie Isn&rsquo;t Broken)</h2>
<p>But before I talk about methods, let&rsquo;s talk about what&rsquo;s going on inside that long head.</p>
<p><strong>The badger hunter&rsquo;s persistence.</strong> Now, dachshunds were bred to track down badgers — animals twice their size with claws like gardening tools — and flush them out. That takes problem-solving, courage, and the kind of stubbornness that makes a Labrador look like a pushover. So when your dachshund ignores you to chase a smell, they&rsquo;re not being naughty. They&rsquo;re doing what 300 years of breeding tells them to do.</p>
<p><strong>Selective hearing = hunting focus.</strong> &ldquo;He hears me when I open the cheese drawer but not when I call his name&rdquo; — I&rsquo;ve seen this exact complaint on r/Dachshund more times than I can count. Still, it&rsquo;s not selective hearing loss. It&rsquo;s selective attention. And your dachshund heard you perfectly. They just decided the squirrel outside was more interesting.</p>
<p><strong>The negotiation mindset.</strong> Every command a dachshund follows goes through this internal filter: &ldquo;What do I get out of this?&rdquo; It&rsquo;s not because they don&rsquo;t love you. My Oscar sleeps curled against my neck every night and cries when I leave for work. But in a training context, love doesn&rsquo;t override instinct. Motivation does.</p>
<p>The takeaway: if you understand that your dachshund isn&rsquo;t &ldquo;bad&rdquo; — they&rsquo;re just wired differently — your entire training approach shifts from frustration to strategy.</p>
<h2 id="training-philosophy-motivation-over-domination">Training Philosophy: Motivation Over Domination</h2>
<p>Look, dominance theory fails with dachshunds. It just does. If you try to alpha-roll a dachshund they&rsquo;ll either (a) scream like you&rsquo;re murdering them, or (b) dig their heels in deeper and then plot their revenge. And I&rsquo;m not exaggerating — dachshunds hold grudges.</p>
<p>Still, positive reinforcement isn&rsquo;t &ldquo;soft&rdquo; training. It&rsquo;s the only method that works with an independent breed that was designed to make decisions on its own. But here&rsquo;s what took me a while to learn: it doesn&rsquo;t mean you&rsquo;re permissive. It means you&rsquo;re strategic.</p>
<h3 id="the-reward-hierarchy">The Reward Hierarchy</h3>
<p>Not all treats are created equal in the dachshund world.</p>
<table>
	<thead>
			<tr>
					<th style="text-align: center">Reward Level</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Examples</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Best Use Case</th>
			</tr>
	</thead>
	<tbody>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: center">Low value</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Regular kibble (a few pieces)</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Home practice of known commands, name game</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: center">Medium value</td>
					<td style="text-align: left"><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0184817SI?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Bil-Jac Little Jacs</a> (&lt; 2 cal each)</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Daily training, potty training, general reinforcement</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: center">High value</td>
					<td style="text-align: left"><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D3MGW5KW?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Clifford Training Treats</a> (chicken/freeze-dried)</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Recall, &ldquo;leave it,&rdquo; high-distraction environments</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: center">Alternative</td>
					<td style="text-align: left"><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CFMDJQ9L?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Open Farm Good Bites</a></td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Owners who want limited-ingredient/natural options</td>
			</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
<p>Now, I use Bil-Jac Little Jacs for 90% of Oscar&rsquo;s daily training — at less than 2 calories per treat, I can run through 30 reps without overfeeding. But when we&rsquo;re at the dog park and I need a rock-solid &ldquo;come&rdquo; while he&rsquo;s chasing a squirrel? That&rsquo;s Clifford territory.</p>
<h2 id="life-stage-training-map">Life Stage Training Map</h2>
<h3 id="stage-1-puppy-816-weeks--the-foundation-window">Stage 1: Puppy (8–16 Weeks) — The Foundation Window</h3>
<h4 id="weeks-12-name-recognition--crate-introduction">Weeks 1–2: Name Recognition + Crate Introduction</h4>
<p>So start on day one. Say your puppy&rsquo;s name, and the moment they look at you — even by accident — mark with &ldquo;yes&rdquo; and drop a treat. And within a few days, their name becomes a cue that means &ldquo;look at me, good stuff coming.&rdquo;</p>
<p>And for crate training, don&rsquo;t close the door on day one. Leave it open, toss treats inside, let your puppy wander in and out on their own terms. Oscar walked into his crate on day 3 to check if there was a peanut butter KONG waiting. By day 7, he&rsquo;d put himself to bed in it at 9 PM. That&rsquo;s the goal — the crate becomes a den, not a cage.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0002AR15U?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">KONG Classic Small</a> with frozen peanut butter inside is my go-to crate association tool. Keeps them busy, builds positive feelings, and buys you 20 minutes of peace. (I wrote a full <a href="/kong-classic-small-dachshund-quick-review-2026/">KONG Classic Small Quick Review</a> if you want the details on why this specific size works best for doxies.)</p>
<h4 id="weeks-36-potty-training">Weeks 3–6: Potty Training</h4>
<p>Here&rsquo;s the hard truth about dachshund potty training: their bladders are tiny and their stubbornness is huge. Most generic guides say &ldquo;take your puppy out every 2 hours.&rdquo; So with a dachshund, make it every 60 to 90 minutes. Yes, including at night.</p>
<p><strong>The cold/rain problem.</strong> Dachshunds hate wet grass. This is the #1 obstacle to potty training a doxie. They&rsquo;ll hold it for hours rather than step on cold damp ground — then pee on your rug the second they get back inside. So don&rsquo;t let them back in until they go. Stand there. Wait. Bring treats. And when they finally go — treat explosion with Bil-Jac.</p>
<p>I took Oscar out every 90 minutes for the first two weeks, even during the night. And yes, I was exhausted. But by week four, he was signaling at the door. The dachshund who supposedly &ldquo;can&rsquo;t be potty trained&rdquo; was trained in a month.</p>
<p>But one rule: never punish accidents. Dachshunds hold grudges. And if you yell at them for peeing on the carpet, they learn to hide from you when they pee — not to stop peeing indoors. So clean it up, move on, take them out more frequently.</p>
<h4 id="weeks-58-sit-down-stay-basics">Weeks 5–8: Sit, Down, Stay Basics</h4>
<p>So use the luring method: hold a treat at their nose, slowly move it up and back over their head — their butt naturally drops into a sit. Mark and reward. And for down, lure from sit position straight down to the floor.</p>
<p>And keep sessions to 2-3 minutes. Dachshund puppies have attention spans measured in seconds, not minutes. Always end on a success — if they&rsquo;re getting distracted, go back to something easy so they finish feeling like a genius. So keep it short, keep it fun, and end before they lose interest.</p>
<h3 id="stage-2-adolescent-412-months--the-testing-phase">Stage 2: Adolescent (4–12 Months) — The Testing Phase</h3>
<p><strong>The regression is real.</strong></p>
<p>Look, Oscar at 5 months was perfect. Perfect recall, perfect sit-stay, walked like a gentleman. But at 7 months, he looked at me like he&rsquo;d never heard &ldquo;sit&rdquo; in his life. I nearly cried. Turns out, this is totally normal for adolescent dachshunds.</p>
<p>So the strategy: increase reward value, decrease session length, and triple your consistency. Your dachshund is testing boundaries — the same way a teenager does. Don&rsquo;t take it personally.</p>
<h4 id="loose-leash-walking-the-doxie-method">Loose Leash Walking (The Doxie Method)</h4>
<p>So traditional &ldquo;stop when they pull&rdquo; doesn&rsquo;t work well with dachshunds. They&rsquo;ll just stand there and stare at you for 5 minutes, then try again. Here&rsquo;s what actually worked for Oscar:</p>
<ol>
<li>Arm yourself with high-value treats</li>
<li>The moment your dachshund looks back at you on the walk — mark and treat</li>
<li>Change direction frequently — they learn to watch you because you&rsquo;re unpredictable and interesting</li>
<li>Use a retractable leash in locked short mode for training</li>
</ol>
<p>The <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01EV1RXKI?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">FLEXI Comfort Retractable Leash</a> was a game changer. I kept it locked at 3 feet for training mode. If he pulled, I stopped. When he looked back at me, mark + treat + unlock a foot of leash. Over 2 weeks, he learned that &ldquo;walking near me = more freedom.&rdquo; At 8 months old, we could do a full 30-minute walk with maybe one or two stops.</p>
<h4 id="recall-the-most-important-and-hardest-dachshund-command">Recall: The Most Important (and Hardest) Dachshund Command</h4>
<p>So start indoors. No distractions → low-distraction yard → high-distraction park. This progression takes weeks, not days.</p>
<p><strong>Critical rule</strong>: NEVER call your dachshund for something they&rsquo;ll hate.</p>
<p>I made the mistake of calling Oscar for a bath once. And he came running, tail wagging, so happy I called him. Then I picked him up and put him in water. And it took 3 weeks to rebuild his recall. Now when it&rsquo;s bath time, I go get him — I don&rsquo;t call. &ldquo;Come&rdquo; must always, always predict good things: treats, play, praise.</p>
<p>Use your highest-value treats for recall training. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D3MGW5KW?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Clifford Training Treats</a> and <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CFMDJQ9L?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Open Farm Good Bites</a> are both solid options — I tested the <a href="/open-farm-training-treats-quick-review-2026/">Open Farm Be Good Bites</a> on Oscar and they&rsquo;re smelly enough to compete with whatever distraction is out there.</p>
<h4 id="leave-it--drop-it">Leave It / Drop It</h4>
<p>And dachshunds will eat literally everything off the ground. And their nose is too powerful. Oscar once found a dropped chicken wing on a walk, and the way he looked at me said &ldquo;this is my prey now.&rdquo;</p>
<p>So the trade-up method: start with something low-value in your hand. Say &ldquo;leave it.&rdquo; The moment they stop trying to get it — mark and reward with something better. Then gradually increase difficulty: on the floor, on a walk, near something genuinely dangerous like a chicken bone or a piece of chocolate.</p>
<h3 id="stage-3-adult-12-months--refinement-and-challenge">Stage 3: Adult (12 Months+) — Refinement and Challenge</h3>
<p>So once your dachshund has the basics, the goal shifts to generalization and fading treats.</p>
<p><strong>Intermittent reinforcement</strong> is your best friend. But random reward — sometimes a treat, sometimes enthusiastic praise, sometimes nothing — keeps the behavior strong because your dachshund never knows which &ldquo;sit&rdquo; will pay out. Like a slot machine for dogs.</p>
<h4 id="desensitization-training-nail-grinder">Desensitization Training (Nail Grinder)</h4>
<p>Here&rsquo;s where I messed up. So I waited until Oscar was 6 months old to start nail grinding. It was a disaster — full drama, Oscar the Magnificent-level betrayal performance. I spent a month doing desensitization. Start from puppy hood and it&rsquo;s a non-issue.</p>
<p>The protocol:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong>Week 1</strong>: Leave the Dremel on the floor. Toss treats near it. Let them sniff it.</li>
<li><strong>Week 2</strong>: Turn the Dremel on in another room while you feed treats. They associate the sound with good things.</li>
<li><strong>Week 3</strong>: Touch the (off) Dremel to their paw. Treat. Repeat until they&rsquo;re bored.</li>
<li><strong>Week 4</strong>: Quick brief touch while running. Treat explosion.</li>
<li><strong>Week 5+</strong>: Full nail grinding routine.</li>
</ol>
<p>The <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DJ3JR93D?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">Dremel PawControl</a> is quiet and gentle enough for dog nails. My full <a href="/dremel-pawcontrol-quick-review-2026/">Dremel PawControl Quick Review</a> covers the desensitization process in more detail. Worth every penny if you can put in the prep work. Even so, if your dachshund is extra sensitive, start with a manual file — the sound is the biggest hurdle, not the sensation.</p>
<h4 id="separation-anxiety-foundations">Separation Anxiety Foundations</h4>
<p>But this isn&rsquo;t a full treatment guide — if your dog shows severe distress when left alone, please consult your vet or a professional behaviorist. Still, two things that helped Oscar:</p>
<p>First, the crate as safe space. Oscar&rsquo;s crate is never used for punishment. It&rsquo;s where the peanut butter KONG lives.</p>
<p>Second, a comfort object. The <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DG66VKS?tag=petcare0e4-20" rel="nofollow sponsored noopener" target="_blank">KONG Cozie Alligator Small</a> lives in Oscar&rsquo;s crate. When I leave, he grabs it and takes it to his bed. It&rsquo;s his &ldquo;Oscar is home alone but not alone&rdquo; buddy. Many owners find it helpful for reducing anxiety symptoms during departures.</p>
<h2 id="troubleshooting-common-dachshund-training-problems">Troubleshooting: Common Dachshund Training Problems</h2>
<table>
	<thead>
			<tr>
					<th style="text-align: left">Problem</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Why It Happens</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">What Actually Works</th>
			</tr>
	</thead>
	<tbody>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Selective deafness</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Hunting focus — they&rsquo;re tracking a smell or sound</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Do attention-getting before giving commands: make a kissy sound, tap your leg, pat the floor</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Leash pulling</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Hunter instinct — they follow scent trails</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Direction-change method + FLEXI locked mode (see loose-leash section)</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Barking at visitors</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Territorial instinct + guard dog heritage</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Guest-entry routine: &ldquo;sit&rdquo; → &ldquo;wait&rdquo; → release to greet</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Eating everything off the ground</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Nose-driven 24/7</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">&ldquo;Leave it&rdquo; training with progressive difficulty — start in house, move to yard, then walks</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Potty training regression</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Environment change, stress, or medical issue</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Go back to basics. More frequent outings, more rewards. If persistent, check with your vet</td>
			</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
<h2 id="5-minute-daily-training-routine">5-Minute Daily Training Routine</h2>
<table>
	<thead>
			<tr>
					<th style="text-align: left">Exercise</th>
					<th style="text-align: center">Duration</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Notes</th>
			</tr>
	</thead>
	<tbody>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Name game + attention warm-up</td>
					<td style="text-align: center">1 min</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Say name, reward eye contact — sets the tone</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Known command review (sit/down/stay)</td>
					<td style="text-align: center">2 min</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Quickfire — 5 reps each, reward every other</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Current focus command (loose leash / leave it / etc.)</td>
					<td style="text-align: center">2 min</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Whatever you&rsquo;re currently working on</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Free play or scent game</td>
					<td style="text-align: center">1-2 min</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Let them win. Toss treats in the grass and let them &ldquo;hunt&rdquo; — mental stimulation</td>
			</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
<p>Dachshunds don&rsquo;t need hour-long training sessions. Their attention span is short, and they get bored with repetition. Five focused minutes every day beats 30 minutes once a week — and your doxie will agree.</p>
<h2 id="what-not-to-do-training-anti-patterns">What NOT to Do (Training Anti-Patterns)</h2>
<table>
	<thead>
			<tr>
					<th style="text-align: left">❌ Don&rsquo;t</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">Why</th>
					<th style="text-align: left">✅ Do This Instead</th>
			</tr>
	</thead>
	<tbody>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Yell or punish</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Dachshunds hold grudges. Punishment makes them fearful, not obedient</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Ignore wrong behavior for 4 seconds, then redirect to something they know</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Repeat commands</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">&ldquo;Sit sit sit SIT SIT SIT&rdquo; teaches them the first 5 cues are optional</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Say it once. Wait 3 seconds. If no response, re-lure</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Punish after recall</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">&ldquo;Come here&rdquo; → punishment → they learn &ldquo;come&rdquo; is dangerous</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">&ldquo;Come&rdquo; always predicts good things. Bad things go get them yourself</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Wait too long to start training</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">8–16 weeks is the prime socialization window</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Start name game and crate introduction on day one</td>
			</tr>
			<tr>
					<td style="text-align: left">Compare to other breeds</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Every dachshund learns at their own pace</td>
					<td style="text-align: left">Celebrate small wins. Your dog isn&rsquo;t a Lab. That&rsquo;s the whole point</td>
			</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
<h2 id="bottom-line">Bottom Line</h2>
<p>Training a dachshund is different from training any other dog. It&rsquo;s not harder — it&rsquo;s just a different game. Your dachshund isn&rsquo;t broken because they don&rsquo;t obey like a Golden Retriever. They&rsquo;re doing exactly what they were bred to do: think for themselves.</p>
<p>The secret is understanding their motivation, working with their instincts instead of against them, and building a relationship based on trust — not dominance. Give your dachshund a reason to listen, and they&rsquo;ll surprise you.</p>
<p><em>For a complete list of everything you need before bringing your dachshund puppy home, check out our <a href="/">Dachshund Puppy Essentials Checklist</a> — it covers potty training setup, crate essentials, and the first-week supplies I wish someone had told me about.</em></p>
<p><em>Need the right leash setup? See our <a href="/">Dachshund Harness &amp; Leash Guide</a>.</em></p>
<p><em>Already using a Dremel? Read my full <a href="/">Dremel PawControl Quick Review</a>.</em></p>]]></content:encoded>
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