Why Does My German Shepherd Keep Marking Territories in House?

my german shepherd keeps marking territories in the house. also we have turned our shed into what looks like a barn for my three dogs with wood shavings and hay to make it comfy for my three german shepherds all male and the one in question has started weeing in there.

It’s obvious – YOU aren’t the alpha, and that dog is an uppity beta who wants to be the alpha. He is "labelling" aka marking everything that is his. I doubt he’d accept training to use one of those label-makers used in supermarkets, so you have these choices:
(1) Regain the status of alpha.
(2) Never bring HIM inside.
(3) Have only one male on the property.

He probably started doing it either almost-to-the-day when he turned 10 months old, or (if he is the senior dog) the day you brought the second dog home.

Some people simply CANNOT share. Some dogs are the same way. The less owner-training a dog gets the more likely that his ancestral canine-instincts will emerge.

How do you regain alpha status?
By earning it – lots of training, total consistency, lots of interesting things that only YOU can provide – that includes the supply of food, but ought not be restricted to it. And effective reprimands each time he scent marks in your presence – you can do nothing about what he does out of your presence.
Les P, owner of GSD_Friendly: http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/GSD_Friendly
"In GSDs" as of 1967

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4 Responses to Why Does My German Shepherd Keep Marking Territories in House?

  1. frogdog_nz says:

    A dog marks its territory, home, people, claiming them as his own by marking.
    It is a security blanket, per human terms.
    The best cure is constant contact and thereby correction advising the dog of unnacceptable behaviour.
    If you run males together each will over ride the others scent by urinating over any trace of the other males presence.
    Chris
    References :

  2. Lis says:

    Neutering can help a lot. If you arent the first people to live in the house, there is also a possibility that the previous owners had dogs that once marked their territory/had an accident.
    All and all, it really comes down to training.
    References :

  3. Catriona says:

    The classic answer is he is marking it as his. It may be you are not being a good enough alpha in his eyes so he sees it as his job to mark the boundarys of his territory. A dog that is not alpha will never mark the packs territory so this is probably why its only the one dog doing it.

    This being said it is also something that dogs with a lack of confidence will do. It gives them i kind of confidence boost when the pee on stuff so if you think your dog doesn’t think of himself as alpha this may be the reason for it.
    References :

  4. King Les The Lofty says:

    It’s obvious – YOU aren’t the alpha, and that dog is an uppity beta who wants to be the alpha. He is "labelling" aka marking everything that is his. I doubt he’d accept training to use one of those label-makers used in supermarkets, so you have these choices:
    (1) Regain the status of alpha.
    (2) Never bring HIM inside.
    (3) Have only one male on the property.

    He probably started doing it either almost-to-the-day when he turned 10 months old, or (if he is the senior dog) the day you brought the second dog home.

    Some people simply CANNOT share. Some dogs are the same way. The less owner-training a dog gets the more likely that his ancestral canine-instincts will emerge.

    How do you regain alpha status?
    By earning it – lots of training, total consistency, lots of interesting things that only YOU can provide – that includes the supply of food, but ought not be restricted to it. And effective reprimands each time he scent marks in your presence – you can do nothing about what he does out of your presence.
    Les P, owner of GSD_Friendly: http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/GSD_Friendly
    "In GSDs" as of 1967
    References :

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