calliecritturs
Posted : 11/1/2009 9:58:19 PM
to be honest, for *me* I crate my dogs while we're gone just for that ONE time that it may prevent disaster. This probably is *not* separation anxiety -- that happens all the time. This is probably being triggered by something or someone - either someone doing something deliberate, someone at your door, or some particular "thing" that is wrecking havoc and upsetting the dog. Not knowing you it's hard to tell since we don't know you well -- but it could be someone at your door, window, an animal outside. But when it does happen either it's of a long duration or it so completely unnerves the dog that it has all sorts of other ramifications.
The problem is -- this kind of destruction can be harmful to the dog. Swinging on vertical blinds, drapes can pull the whole assembly down on the dog and injure it.
A friend of mine lost two dogs -- they were playing while she was gone and somehow pulled a television set off a stand -- the explosion of glass injured one dog to such a degree he had to be put down, and the actual falling of the tv killed the other. It was devastating.
The primary reason TO crate is to protect the dog. Dogs are den animals -- they see a crate not as a prison but instead as a 'safe place'. You need to acclimate them to it -- you don't just shut them in a crate and then leave for hours. You feed in there, give treats in there, gradually make it a 'good' place to be (and I always keep the crate in my bedroom -- it's a room for "sleeping" anyway).
As long as you don't treat it like something that distresses *you* and he associates the crate with all things 'good' he shouldn't be miserable at all.
I used to be adamantly against crating -- and then not only did my friend lose both her dogs, but I had 2 of my 3 dogs have life-threatening injuries because of not-crating them. And I've crated ever since and have never regretted it.
It is we humans who have this "thing" about "losing his freedom". That's not a dog concept.