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#1 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Middletown, PA
Posts: 103
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Hello all once again! So glad that the weather has decided to warm up a little here in PA! Got to go out and do some fun activities with Snickers YAY
![]() So here is my issue.....Stimpy lived with my husband at his parents house for a little over a year before we were married (we got him Aug. 2000 and finally moved in together Nov. 2001) Anyway, he was left in the bathroom a lot.. they figured it was easier to keep him there in case he had an accident, easy clean up... well when we finally moved in together, we bought a crate for him. Well one day I came home from work, and we had just put a new lock on the screen door, well... I couldn't get the key to work, so I had to bust open the back door, and in the process heard the pitter patter of paws across the linoleum floor. He had escaped, and his nose was bleeding... granted we zip tied this thing, it was like Ft. Knox. So from that day on, he was free to roam the house... he did not touch a thing (except for the occasional dirty dish from the sink) Now flash forward... I was VERY adamate about crate training Snickers, cause I heard of the benefits (mainly potty training). Now it seems that my Hubby and I can't agree, I say when you can't pay attention to her she should be penned, he says that it will make her more hyperactive. I think it gives her more structure and prevents her from getting into something she shouldn't have. I also am TRYING to make it a rule that when we eat, she gets penned... she's a huge mooch.. and yes I know we own a food motivated breed... Some sort of input/ guidance would be GREATLY appreciated
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I could sure go for a Snickers Blizzard right about now!
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#2 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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IMHO in the examples you give the crate is more of a cruch or a substitute for training. example A dog can be taught to sit or lie quitely in a particular spot while you are eating it is quite easy and does not require a crate. see Table manners
IMHO the crate as a tool for pottytraining is overrated and often abused. It can be very effect at teach one aspect of potty training however and that is for the dog to hold it until it can access an appropriate places to go. But it often abused on the mistake notion a dog will never soil its den, every dog has its limit. I have had to crate confine a dog for seven months total including pre and post surgical care for a soft tissue injury to the leg. I understand the profond psycological effect confinement can have on a dog. I am not condeming the tool but the practice of extended confinement I think it is best to confine the use of a crate to those instance it is a training tool or used as a safety device. ie confine the dog in the car, or other open area where if they were left to roam free they are in danger of being injured. All my dogs are crate trained and happily go into their crates on command and some time on their own as well. But I do not use it as a substitute for training the proper behavior. Your hubby views your use of the crate as totally as a management technique and never a training tool which is not the case. You on the other hand are a little to eager to embrace it for ease in managing situations rather than take the time to train an appropriate behavior. There is some middle ground. Keep in mind a crate is a tool nothing more or less. It can be used for good as well as bad it is your (plural) decission on how to best deploy it if at all as a training or management tool. Keeping in mind that dogs have been house trained successfully without one. There is always more than one way to accomplish any training task. To be successful however you need to come up with a program and training scheme each of you is comfortable with. and cofindent you can deploy successfully. Two different training styles confuses the dog and slows progress while eventual the dog will learn to adapt. Quote:
The crate can be an excellent interactive training tool. Using it as such might be one way to get the hubby more on board in using it in more management situations as well. In this vain I sugggest the follow video with heavy emphysis of using the crate as an inteactive training tool. Crate Games for Self-Control & Motivation DVd and a couple utube video with some of the training in action Last edited by Mikey T; 03-09-2010 at 03:35 AM. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 46
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I've never used a crate to train any dog I've owned, including Flash. It took more effort and a longer time to potty train him than it had with any other dog I've owned, but it was successful. He's also never been destructive of furniture, clothing, etc., but I think that in large part, that's because such behavior was never tolerated and alternative behaviors were encouraged and rewarded.
I agree with Mikey in that many people use the crate as a crutch. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: southcentral Pa.
Posts: 2,215
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The only time I've used a crate with puppies is at night, as a tool for housebreaking: I've kept the pup by my side of the bed in a small crate with soft bedding; when he had to pee he would whimper because he didn't want to soil his bed. I would get up, carry the pup downstairs to his potty place in the yard, praise, and take him back to his crate to sleep. With really young pups I would do this at least twice during the night.
It taught the pup that when he signalled, I would take him to relieve himself; he quickly generalized this behavior; we use a bell on the door for our dogs to signal now. If my husband or I couldn't be with a young pup to supervise, they were confined to a relatively small area which we puppy-proofed and gated off, with their bed and a food-stuffed Kong to keep them busy. I personally feel that too many dogs in America live in crates. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Canoose, NB Canada
Posts: 10
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I used a crate with Beldin and Mocha when they were little for help with potty training - after that I'd actually leave the door off of it and they would go in and out as they pleased duriung the day and were only confined to the crate (door back on) at night. It wasn't long before they would stay in the crate at night and I could leave the door mostly shut (but not locked or latched).
After Mocha was sick and we only had Beldin he seemed to choose to stay in the crate himself - it was a place of comfort to him and he was sad and missing Mocha. Then after we moved across country from BC to New Brunswick he actually became very possessive of his crate. It was the one thing he was familiar with and that was strickly "his". Now it's used primarily as a bed and it's entirely by his choice. As for begging food during meal times he knnows better than that. There is a defining line in the flooring between the kitchen and livingroom space even though it's basically one big open room. He'll lay on the floor on the livingroom side and watch us quitely. But he won't step over that line while we are sitting at the table. I personally think that having a dog is a little like having a perpetual 2year old (only they listen better at times!) ... I wouldn't stick a child in a "playpen" for hours on time - sometimes training isn't "convienient" and having a pup or dog underfoot can be frustrating at times... but it's part and parcel of being a pet owner. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Francisco, Ca
Posts: 1,336
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I use crates for housebreaking, my dogs sleep in them at night, lounge in them during the day if I'm only gone for an hour or two. A great big plus for crates--once you get your dog used to them and quiet in them, they are great for travel in motels. Zip dog in crate, put a do no disturb sign out, and you're off to dinner or for a short sight seeing tour.
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Sharon Hall Grace (puppy in training) Bella, UD, VER, TD, RE, CGC Pearl,UD, TDX, RE, CGC (Waiting at the Bridge) Samantha, Theodore, CGC, Louella, Zeke and Arty, Bassets All; (All Waiting at the Bridge) |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Posts: 61
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I crated my Snickers from the first night I got her and I put her in there at night and when I leave the house. At the start I crated her when I would eat, but quickly stopped because I personally didn't want to put her in the crate after she spent most of the day in there. She isn't left in there all day, but a few hours at a time. She willingly goes in there and doesn't fuss unless we put her in there when we are still at home.
You may want to look at a doggie play pen. It's a big circle or octagon that you can put her in to confine her when you are eating, cleaning, etc. Basically when you can't watch her every second. If done properly I don't think dogs think of crates as prisons (that's a human thing).
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My Basset is smarter than your honor student. YouTube: Snickers Is Smarter Than A 5th Grader 'Dog Whisperer' Training Approach More Harmful Than Helpful |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Virginia
Posts: 200
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I never crated trained Mattie. Mattie never went into one. Sometimes I wish I did, but I only had minor things to come home to clean up, thank goodness!!
Since I didn't crated train Mattie as a puppy, I would get up about every 2 to 3 hours and let her out at night. Still 4 years later, I can get up once to twice a night to let her out to go to the bathroom. I am a light sleeper so I know every move she makes during the night, and I know when she walks around it is time for her to go out. The longest time Mattie is lefted in the house alone is around 5 hours. And she does fine now. If it is longer then that then Mattie's grandma comes and sees her or she goes to Grandma's house. Mattie still to this day has accidents in the house, sometimes I think it is just because she is mad because we left her. As a puppy, they were just normal potty training accidents (i have had to scrub the floor before). I got child proof locks for pantry and some cabinets cause Mattie would get into them as a puppy and help herself. We came home one day to Vegatable Oil all over the kitchen floor. But the child proof locks solved that problem. Most of the time when my husband and I are gone Mattie sleeps. Cause both couchs are very well laid in when we get home. I am glad we did not have to crate train Mattie!! I don't have anything against it, I just did not want it for Mattie!! |
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