Nighttime Anxiety

    • Bronze

    Nighttime Anxiety

    Sorry, this is kind of long, but I wanted to make sure I include enough info:

    My beagle, Baylor, is 3 years old and suffers from Separation Anxiety. When I first got him (at 9 weeks old), I tried to crate train him, but that didn#%92t work out well at all. Even though I followed all of the crate training steps—feeding him there, making it a happy fun place, not closing the door, not leaving him there alone for long periods of time--he hated the crate, and if I left him alone in it he would cry and howl (which was not great since I live in an apartment and he is loud, even for a beagle), and I#%92d come home to find both he and his crate soaking wet with drool. I#%92d leave him with a stuffed kong (which he loves, normally), but he wouldn#%92t touch it in the crate. He#%92d wait until I got home and then would eat it. So, after about 3 months of this, I left him out of the crate (again with a stuffed kong) when I left. He did much better in terms of drooling/fear, though he#%92d still howl, and I stopped using the crate altogether. Cut to now (a few years later) and he#%92s gotten much better with the separation anxiety (a combination of desensitizing him, routine, and medication—he#%92s currently on Clomicalm), except for one major thing: he freaks out if left alone at night (he#%92s fine in the daytime).

    Normally, Baylor is never left alone for longer than 3 hours (I think the longest he has ever been left alone is 5 hours). I#%92m a student, so on the 2 days I#%92m gone for more than 3 hours, he goes to doggie daycare. On the other days (when I#%92m gone for about 3 hours during the day), I leave him alone with some treats (stuffed kong, etc.) and he does fine. He does get really excited when I come home, but I ignore him until he calms down (which doesn#%92t take too long anymore, usually only a minute or so). He#%92s usually just sleeping or laying by the door when I get home, no major panic barking or anything. The difference is if I go out at night. If I leave at night (again, usually for no longer than 3 or 4 hours), I follow the same routine I do during the day: make sure to take him for a long (2 mile) walk to tire him out, give him his treats, leave with no big fuss. The difference is, I come home and can hear him panic barking. He does eat the treats, but he still freaks out (after he#%92s finished, I#%92m guessing). I asked my neighbor and she confirms that he barks continuously some nights (the other night I went out and he barked from about 9:30pm until 1 am according to my neighbor). So, now (finally!) my question: why might he be panicking at night but not during the day? I can#%92t figure out what the difference is, so does anyone have any suggestions about what#%92s causing this night-anxiety? And/or how to fix it?

    Thanks!
    • Gold Top Dog
    One suggestion along with a qualifying question:  Does your beagle get to run and play on days with no doggie day care? 
     
    Sometimes the frustration that accompanies an SA dog can be alleviated a bit by proper amount of exercise.  With a beagle or any other hound, this means running, playing-things of that nature.
     
    If you really want to get him a bit more tired, try playing the "find it" game.  Put the dog in place where he can't see what you're doing and then hide a handful or so of treats throughout the rooms which he is allowed to access.  Release him and give him the command "Find it."  The scenthound in him gets to perform a real job, the treat hound in him gets to eat some treats and your companion dog gets mental and a bit of physical exercise.  It's also fun for you to see if he can find the treats you've hidden.
     
    I do this game with my pupper and it's incredibly fun to watch him "hunt" for the treats.  It also keeps him focused on a task for 5-15 minutes, depending upon how well I've hidden everything.
    • Bronze
    Thanks for the "find it" game suggestion! We played for a bit yesterday and he seemed to have a lot of fun--any game that involves food is his favorite--though my treat-hiding skills need some work to make it last longer.

    He does get outside run-and-play time on non-daycare days, but this might be related to his nighttime anxiety since I can't bring him anywhere to run around once it gets dark. There are parks near my apartment, but they aren't well lit, so they're ruled out for any playing at night. Although even on days when I go out at night and he's been at daycare all day (so is pretty exhausted), the anxiety kicks in.

    I do play some inside games with him--my stand-by is to stand at one end of the apartment and throw one piece of food at a time to the other, which he'll race after (I'll feed him a meal like this, which usually lasts for about 10 minutes)--but they often seem to get him revved up more than anything. The "find it" game had kind of a similar result. It's like he gets so excited about the food (he is really, really food-focused), that even though he's been running and sniffing and playing for a while, he's still really excited.