calliecritturs
Posted : 1/21/2007 3:31:18 PM
All of my dogs stay in wire crates ...and in honesty, I wouldn't have a plastic one. (and they can force the doors on those and get in trouble too if it's not a crate in good shape).
Mostly it's the Wal-Mart crates that are the biggest problem -- they fit together with tension -- you 'spring' the top of the crate enough so the front and back slide under 'the tab' -- but it's that very 'ease' with which they go together that make them dangerous because if a dog (particularly a dog breed really strong in the shoulders or a dog completely freaked out) presses against the sides to try to slip the crate apart then they can wrench it sufficiently to get part of their body/head out of it.
Wire crates come in many different weights and strengths -- for a dog with separation anxiety that is a STRONG dog you definitely want a heavy gauge wire crate. That means you're going to spend more on the crate. In fact, just this week we went thru this -- I had an old Wal-Mart crate Luna was using -- she doesn't have separation anxiety, but she did freak out when someone delivered a parcel to the door outside the bedroom (looks onto my driveway -- nothing 'horrible' happened) and she literally pulled some of the wires free with her nails.
So we went crate shopping -- I nearly bought one online, but honestly I wasn't positive any were strong enough so we went to P-Sm*rt and literally picked their heaviest crate -- the wires are more than twice the size of other crates, and the thing I LOVED about it is that the door swings in as well as out so I can put it against any wall (and it actually has three doors in it which is super!).
All the doors double lock (you want that for sure) but trust me -- NOTHING could easily destroy that crate.
My problem with the plastic crates is they are hot and there is little circulation (remember I live in Florida and I don't always run my air). yes, dogs are den animals but if I have a dog that needs the more 'snug' feeling of a totally covered crate I just put a blanket or rug over it.. A wire crate also won't take on odor like a plastic one will.
The fact that they can see out of it all the way around, and get smells from all the way around can often help. They feel 'safe' but not cut off.
Given that Luna had a bad experience in the Wal-mart crate she wasn't thrilled to go in this new one. So we left the door open at first, made sure she had breakfast in there, got water from in there, etc. -- you literally have to train them TO the crate -- particularly if you have to desensitize.
Take a whole weekend -- just toss something yummy in there, leave the door open and ignore the dog. You want the dog to get the idea that not every time the dog goes IN the crate that they're going to be stuck there and scared. Feeding in the crate is a good idea. Keep the time short at first.