brookcove
Posted : 12/13/2006 11:00:48 PM
Is a dog really at a high risk for bad behavior if he is crated for about 8 hours on weekdays, even if he is given adequate exercise and socialization prior to and after being crated?
Nope, has nothing to do with the crate. It's what you do with the dog to ensure (or don't) that the dog's needs for exercise, mental stimulation, training, and companionship, are adequately met.
I couldn't crate Zhi when I was home at any time. She has an inbred need to be within touching distance of me at all times. Duh, that's why she's this tiny dog with no hair and fancy trimmings - she's cute and snuggly. She'd go Wacko Dog if I isolated her in a crate for hours at a time.
Who is this guy anyway? It makes my hair stand on end when someone claims to be a dog trainer and then says something like this:
Our dogs are beloved family members and need to be treated as such. You wouldn't keep your child confined to his room for his entire youth and adolescence, would you? You'd have one maladjusted young person!
Um, duh? My dog is a
dog and needs to be treated as such! No, I'm not going to crate a dog for 3/4 of the clock, but they do just fine crated comfortably for a few hours while Mom is at work.
He suggests confining the dog to a small room. I wouldn't confine my kid to a
small room, either! Even when my kids have "time out" they sit on the bed with the door wide open. I want them to always know they have the choice to be wrong, because
they are not dogs! I can almost always protect my dogs from the consequences of their actions, but the kids have to learn to reason through those consequences and make informed and confident decisions.
I can't explain to my puppy Ted that he's not supposed to chew Mommy's computer cords, or open the medicine cabinet and eat my prescription meds. Nor does he understand that the house is not the potty, not even the farthest, darkest corners of the sitting room where we don't hang out much. [8|] So until he's got the picture, he stays where he won't get in trouble, and he is "set up for success" - in his crate - when we can't watch him.
Eventually Ted will be big enough that going outside has become a habit, and his urge to chew will be confined to his raw meaty bones. Then he'll get his freedom while we are gone, too.
Until then the crate eliminates many confrontations between his puppy nature and my need to have a clean, unchewed household. Otherwise we are back to the days of swatting with newspapers and rubbing Pup's nose in crap, right? But I suppose I have to
buy this guy's book to find out.
ETA: I'm saying "duh" a lot. I promise I'll stop now. [8|]