Can You House Train a Raccoon? Everything Owners Need to Know



House Training A Raccoon




A raccoon is one of the most anti-social animals so it is important to make him socialize and interact with other household pets. 


You may consider putting him up together with the dogs and together they can become best of friends. If you teach a raccoon mutual respect for other household pets like the cats, rabbits or the chickens then you should not experience any problems. Most of the times raccoons can get into hissy fights with the cats and I would recommend that one of them to be gotten of the room if he the most aggressive.

House training a raccoon takes a lot of perseverance but it is well worth it in the long run. Raccoons are very dangerous pets and if you ever hit, slap or even strike him, he will think that you are attacking him and he will end up attacking back

I would advise every raccoon owner never to keep it locked in a cage. Raccoons need to have their space and run most of the time. If it is a must you must cage them, then I would recommend that you get him a larger cage where they have room and space to run about. 

In this cage ensure that there is a bed for him to rest at night. Also, you could improvise him with a pillow, blanket, and a few stuffed toys to keep him busy. Another addition to these can be a litter box which ought to be cleaned regularly. A water dish is also another necessity for the cage. They will get thirsty at one point or another. Train your raccoons to be less destructive at an early stage since they are known to be very vicious.

Talk to your raccoon in a pleasant voice but not the stern voice that will leave them devastated. Raccoon proofing your house is another thing you should do before bringing him in the house. Raccoons are commonly known for opening up fridges and eating to their fill. A DIY fridge proof like putting a rolling pin on the fridge’s handle will do the trick. Also, raccoons are universally known for their fascination with ceramics, so ensure that all cupboards are locked.


Litter Training

When your raccoon grows a bit older and starts going to the bathroom on their own you should introduce a litter box.  Stimulating a raccoon before putting him in the litter box will ensure that he goes poop or pee in the litter box.  

Continuous peeing or poop in the litter box will create a scent for the raccoons and it will automatically ensure that they do their business in the litter box every time.
Litter training raccoons can be hazardous at times. 

The litter can be dusty and could eventually end causing respiratory problems and the litter also sticks to the raccoon’s sensitive feet. Immediately you see your raccoon making a squat on the floor, go and tell them that that is not good and that they should do their deposits in the litter box. 

Even if you find that the raccoons have already deposited on the floor, take him to the litter box anyway so that he gets learns that that is where he is supposed to go every time. Ensure that you get an extra-large litter box for him.


It is also significant to have your raccoon sterilized or castrated at 5 or 6 months. An unneutered male will get aggressive. So you will need to have him neutered. Spaying your female is an option though some females will become very irritable when they come in heat. Also at this time, you will need to have them vaccinated for rabies.

Ensure that you bathe your raccoon once or twice a year with a mild shampoo. More bathing with shampoo means that the raccoons will lose body oils. If you have to give him a bath, fill the bath tub with just plain water and let him have fun there playing with his toys.

Finally, a raccoon should be gently brushed with a brush or wire comb. During spring and early summer your raccoon’s fur will come out in clumps. The fur can become a tangled mess. Comb this matted fur out very gently.


Potty Training Cartoons

Potty Training Cartoons

Below are some of the best potty training cartoon you could ever wish to have a look a at. hope you will enjoy.












Baby Milestones Potty Training



Image result for baby milestones potty trainingBaby Milestones Potty Training

One of the most problematic characteristics of toilet training for many parents is the irregular pace at which different types of training occur. Your toddler may learn to urinate into a potty quite effortlessly but take it may take several more months to start having bowel movements there. Daytime training may have been a smooth transition for your toddler, but he remains to wet the bed recurrently through age five.

Since the order and promptness with which each of these skills is learned may vary from child to child, it is impossible to compare one child’s mastery with another’s to define whether your child’s progress is “normal.” In most cases, the best response to uneven adoption of skills is to remain persistent and understanding; giving your child the time and space he needs to take the next step toward complete attainment of toilet training.

Interruptions in bowel control can be mostly disturbing for many parents, however—especially when children show such puzzling behavior as clandestinely depositing bowel movements in a closet or other hiding place, smearing feces on the wall or other surface, or bursting into tears when their stool is flushed down the toilet.

On the contrary, toddlers are often tremendously proud of the product their bodies have created—expecting applause and admiration, not discontentment—and are unenthusiastic or even anxious at the prospect of letting these products go. This averseness can grow even stronger during periods when mastery of their body or secrecy becomes a high-priority issue in their lives, or when they are experiencing a fear of the potty or of some other aspect of bowel training that they are unable to articulate.

In utmost cases, hiding or playing with stool is a normal part of early childhood that will soon pass if you do not respond to it in a melodramatic way. Instead, calmly ask your child why he is behaving in this way, firmly remind him of the rules about where stool goes, and work to come up with a solution to his problem. You may find that your child is more willing to deposit his stool in the potty if he is then allowed to transfer it to the toilet and flush it himself. You may decide that it is necessary to monitor your child’s potty use until his interest in playing with his stools has passed.

In many cases, when your child’s health or other significant contemplations are not at stake, you may find that the best solution is to simply wait until your child matures. If so, you may find that what at first seemed an enormous gap between bladder and bowel training actually turned out to be no more than three or four weeks.

While nighttime bowel control occurs quite early and naturally in most children, bladder control usually happens much later—habitually months or even years after daytime training is complete—and requires conscious effort.  Bedwetting remains to be quite common through age five, and it usually does not need medical intervention until age eight to ten. Many children under age six are not physiologically capable of remaining dry at night, since their bladders have not appropriately matured and their bodies may not yet consistently wake them from sleep when it’s time to urinate.

Almost every child will experience at least a few nighttime bedwetting before the toilet-training process is truly complete.Since conflicts over such mishaps can easily spill over to cause resistance during the day, it is usually best to downplay night training through the toddler and even perhaps the preschool years. If your child is capable of constantly waking up to use the bathroom even at age two or three, count yourself lucky and allow him to do so. If accidents occur regularly, try keeping him in training pants or even a diaper at night for as long as he feels comfortable in them, and respond calmly to any accidents that occur.


Funny Potty Training Pictures

FUNNY POTTY TRAINING PICTURES

Kids are always funny when they want to poop. They will always try and do crazy stuff that they are not aware of and ours is just to always try and capture these amazing moments as they happen.
below are some potty training pictures that you will find funny. Enjoy









Here are more funny potty training pics
funny potty training pic
funny potty training pics