Absolutely, and can even be taught to go on your command. This is how i did it with taz my young border collie. Choose the area of the garden which is to be his loo. This is a peice of cake with a puppy simply because you have to take them outside so frequently to empty. Always lead them to the area to go. When they have done it in the right place make a big fuss, give a treat if you like. Then let the puppy go out on hs own (presumably you tell the dog "wee wee" or something - I use "Tazzytime!") and see if he has learnt - if he has a big fuss, well done, good boy and treat, every time. If not, never mind, keep at it - he will get it! Dogs might like to roll in other dogs poo, they generally don't like to roll in their own, so it benefits everyone to have a private space for his toilet. Now, with Tazzie, he was 16 months when I got him. When we go out, I always have the lead round my neck whilst we are walking/playing. He knows at the end of the walk when i remove the lead and say "walk over" that's exactly what I mean, but I also then say "Tazzytime" and if he needs to go he will - (this was achieved by catching him going and saying "tazzytime" again and again until he got it) (I know i have an advantage owning one of the most inteligent dogs in the world!)-and then he also knows when I say "bin" we have to visit the dog waste bin with his droppings - how? Just repeatedly tell him what you are doing every step of the way, again and again until he knows! Partly routine and partly being able to retain commands and names of objects learnt through repetition and reward. Good luck - never again will my parents come to look at my garden, step in a huge poo and tread it all over my house, their car, and then their own house! Update 1(sorry if there's repetative advice!) It might be hard if you have a large yard. When your dog poos where you don't want him/her to, calmly put him/her in a cage (if you have one) and remove the waste and put some where you want your dog to poo. This means the smell would stick here, and the dog would poo there the next time as well. If you do not have a cage, put him/her on his/her own in a dark room as a punishment, for a short while. Ignore any protests. And don't forget to give him/her a treat when s/he poos in the right spot!
area of your yard, area of your house, area of your room, and a nine by nine from subway.
Without knowing where you reside, it is impossible to tell you a good salvage yard in your area. There are salvage yards that specialize in certain types of vehicles as well.
Yard is to fence as cell is to membrane. Just like a fence surrounds a yard and allows certain objects in and out, a membrane surrounds the cell and only allows specific nutrients inside of it.
Fix a wet area on yard
A square yard is a measure of area that represents an area that is one yard by one yard in size. If you have a roll of paper 1 yard wide and you pull some off the roll and cut it off at a length of 1 yard, your piece of paper is 1 yard by 1 yard in size. It has 1 square yard of area. Note that, because the yard is three feet in length, the square yard is a square that is 3 feet by 3 feet, or 9 square feet. A square yard is 9 square feet. The reason we went here is because if the square yard doesn't have to be a perfect square. It can be a rectangle that is 2 feet by 4 1/2 feet in size. As long as the product of the length and the width is 1 square yard (or 9 square feet), you'll have that square yard. Extending the idea, any flat shape can have a square yard of area. As long as the equivalent "shaded area" of the shape equals the shaded area of a square that is 1 yard by 1 yard, both have an area of 1 square yard.
The area of 1 square yard is equal to 9 square feet, as 1 yard is equivalent to 3 feet. Therefore, when calculating area, you multiply the length and width in yards, resulting in a total area of 1 square yard being 9 square feet.
A Yard is a measurement of length in one direction. Square Yards is a measurement of area. For a square area, you measure lenght of one side and muliply it by Width or the other side. A (Sq-Yd) = L (Yard) X W (Yard) Since a Yard = 3 Feet, then the area of a 1 yard by 1 yard square is Area (Sq-Ft) = 3 ft X 3 ft = 9 Sq-Ft So convert Area in Sq-Yards to area in Sq-Ft, multily by 9. Since a Yard = 36 Inches, then the area of a 1 yard by 1 yard square is Area (Sq-In) = 36 In X 36 In = 1296 Sq-In. Formula to convert 1 Sq-Yards to area in Sq-Inches, multiply by 1296.
The area of one square yard is 9 square feet. 3x3=9
There is no answer. A square is area. A yard is linear.
1 square yard of area = 9 square feet of area, even if there's nothing in the area.
No. A yard measures a straight line, which is 3 feet long. A square yard measures a square that is 3 feet long on each side. Multiply two sides to get the total area of a square yard. So a yard is 3 feet long and a square yard covers an area of 9 feet.
The area of a circle with a 6.4 yard radius is: 36.32 square yards OR 326.88 square feet.