Anonymous wrote:We just got a puppy (I've never had a dog) and we are going to training classes - the trainer had a crate and a pen around the crate. Besides the crate inside the pen was a pee pad and the bowl for food/water and toys.
So we bought these items. The puppy goes into his crate at bedtime...however we do not close the crate door EVER. We will NEVER close the crate door, I just can't imagine doing that to a dog. So at night the puppy can leave crate and use pee pad if he wants. We use the pen if he needs to be left home alone or when we are eating dinner and he needs to be confined for example. We probably could have put dog bed in the pen and not bought a crate, although the puppy went straight into the crate to sleep, probably what he is used to from the breeder. Like I said we will never close the crate door. I worry about people doing this and the forgetting their dog is in there! I don't think this practice should be encouraged, not everyone is responsible!
Anonymous wrote:Reviving this thread--we have a 5-month old puppy who hates his crate despite intensive crate-training and following all the recommendations to end up with a crate-loving dog. We now keep him gated in two rooms which is working well. But everyone keeps telling me we are setting ourselves up for trouble, because puppies go through a more intense teething/destructive phase at 7-8 months. Was this your experience? I would really like to keep up the gating because it's been much less stressful for everyone, but I don't know if that is a mistake.
When we leave him gated he has his bed and tons of chew toys and other toys, as well as water. We are not leaving him for long stretches but at times may need to be gone 3 or so hours.
Anonymous wrote:We have a new one year old rescue and we have never had a dog before so we don't know what we're doing. When our dog is alone or at night she shreds all kinds of things, TP, boxes, containers, socks. I am not sure how to train her not to do this. We are trying to keep stuff out of reach. But yesterday I turned my back and she ate an entire plastic box of Whole Foods blueberry muffins.
We accused each other for days of eating a box of choc chip cookies...until we realized it was the dog.
Anonymous wrote:So, I never created my dog, golden. And within few weeks he was fine, not chewing on anything or eating off tables or trash even when we were not home. He had other issues, so I am not pretending he is most perfect dog in the world. My DH (Western US) never crated his dogs, nor did anybody in Europe, where I am from. Is this East Coast thing? Why do you crate your dogs? What is the benefit? My dog found his place, on the floor by my bed and that is where he stays most of the day while I am at work. He goes back to that spot when I leave and he is there when I come back, without any indication of anything destroyed, moved. I mean he might get up, but it doesn't seem like he does. At night I will say, "night, night, and he goes straight there. Wouldn't crating be cruel? This way if he really has no go at night he will get up and put his head on my bed, by me, rarely happens, almost never but still he can do that. So, what is the benefit of crating? If there is a thread about this already, post me a link? Thanks.