Anonymous wrote:Our 7 month old puppy was spayed last week. We put her to bed in her crate and two hours late she started whining. We took her to go potty. She seemed very uncomfortable and unsettled so I slept on the couch and she slept next to me on the floor or her doggy bed. She'd wake up and cry. I'd rub her head. It was a tough night.
By night 2 she was a ton better and slept in her crate all night like usual. Now she's 100% fine and fully recovered.
OP, your dog was traumatized that first night. She now hates her crate. You need to rebuild a positive association and trust that it will be okay when she's in the crate.
Anonymous wrote:You know how kids with ear infections tend to be fine when they are up and about then terrorist when they go to bed? Sometimes pain can be really bad. Maybe she couldn't get comfortable in the crate. And now it is snowballing. Who knows but to me it doesn't sound just behavioral. She is off and you need to help her rather than recreate train her. 2 hours of barking post spaying?!? Come on OP. Help her.
Anonymous wrote:You know how kids with ear infections tend to be fine when they are up and about then terrorist when they go to bed? Sometimes pain can be really bad. Maybe she couldn't get comfortable in the crate. And now it is snowballing. Who knows but to me it doesn't sound just behavioral. She is off and you need to help her rather than recreate train her. 2 hours of barking post spaying?!? Come on OP. Help her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you put her in the crate and not have someone right there right after surgery? She's in pain. Call the vet.
What? Her crate is next to our bed. I already spoke w the vet who said it's behavioral and not medical. Also why do you say she's in pain? She's happy
All day long. - eating, drinking, tail wagging, walking (slow and short) totally normal. It's only once we put in crate, she gets agitated and barks nonstop.
I'd take her for a second opinion. Your vet sounds terrible.
Why do You think that? I agree it seems behavioral.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you put her in the crate and not have someone right there right after surgery? She's in pain. Call the vet.
What? Her crate is next to our bed. I already spoke w the vet who said it's behavioral and not medical. Also why do you say she's in pain? She's happy
All day long. - eating, drinking, tail wagging, walking (slow and short) totally normal. It's only once we put in crate, she gets agitated and barks nonstop.
I'd take her for a second opinion. Your vet sounds terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you put her in the crate and not have someone right there right after surgery? She's in pain. Call the vet.
What? Her crate is next to our bed. I already spoke w the vet who said it's behavioral and not medical. Also why do you say she's in pain? She's happy
All day long. - eating, drinking, tail wagging, walking (slow and short) totally normal. It's only once we put in crate, she gets agitated and barks nonstop.
Anonymous wrote:Why would you put her in the crate and not have someone right there right after surgery? She's in pain. Call the vet.