Edited to say to moderators that I just realized I posted this in the wrong area. It should probably be moved to the Training section, I think??
We were fortunate with our previous dog - he was very calm and was a relaxed helper at the door on Halloween. He loved to see the kids and get petted for 2+ hours in one night!
Our new dog, Ruby, is more excitable (and still fairly young - estimated 18 months), and we expect her to be a bit wild on Halloween. We're trying to decide what to do for Monday night. One option is turning off our lights and not answering the door, but I'm 99% sure that some kids will still ring the bell, and that will make her race around in a tizzy, wondering why we're not getting up to answer it. Another option is to spend the evening at our friends' house, which is in a very remote area with zero trick-or-treaters.
The third option is staying home, passing out candy, and trying to make it a valuable (and reasonably calm) opportunity to expose her to the activity. However, we'd want it to be as minimally stressful for her AND for me and DH!
Does anyone have any words of wisdom or pointers about how best to handle the candy-passing process? She's not 100% reliable yet off-leash if the front door is opened (she may try to go out on the porch), so that means we'll have to keep her leash on for the night (we have a short tab style one we can use). Is it as simple as the three of us going to the door everytime, DH holding her a couple feet back trying to keep her in a sit, and me passing out the candy? Or should we incorporate something else? She's been fairly good with the children she's met (friendly, but a little too jumpy and exuberant in her attempts to get over to say hello), but that's only 4 or 5 neighbor kids who she sees often. We get a TON of trick-or-treaters, so this would be quite different for her.
Thanks in advance for any advice! Since DH does most of her handling, he may decide it's easier to leave with her for the night, but we're still deciding!