Crate Training is a kindness
All training starts with taking advantage of your dog’s natural
inclinations to reinforce the behavior you want.
The only place your dog will not, by nature, mess, is its
sleeping place. Crate training works with your dog’s instinct - he
never has the opportunity to be “bad.”
Crate training is fairly intense for you. The rule is: if you
are not actively paying attention to your dog, your dog is in the
crate. Period. Even if you’re in the same room. If you’re not
watching your puppy, it’s in the crate. If you think “caging” your
dog is cruel, get over it. It’s worse for your dog not to know the
rules of the house.
Crate training is not an excuse to ignore your dog for hours at
a time. A puppy cannot go more than a couple of hours during the
day without a “bathroom break.” If your dog learns to mess in its
crate the behavior is very difficult to correct. It’s one of the
biggest challenges when adopting strays or rescues from shelters.
It can be done, but requires patience and dedication.
Dogs should be taken out at regular intervals; after meals,
after naps and after play sessions. And “business” walks are
not playtime. Put the collar and leash on, take the dog to a
specific spot you want it to use for its toilet area, give your dog
a command “go potty.” If it does, reward it with praise and
cookies, say “good go potty.” Forget about public embarrassment. If
you’re easily embarrassed, don’t get a dog. Of course you can use
any words you want - a friend of ours used “hit it” with her dogs.
She just had to be careful not to use the phrase under other
circumstances.
Your puppy should also sleep in the crate, ideally in your
bedroom. Dogs are social animals, they need to know their “pack” or
family, is close by. If the dog wakes you in the night, take it out
on leash. Give it 10 minutes to “do its business,” go back in, pop
him in his crate, say goodnight and go back to bed. Don’t let the
dog out by itself, even in a fenced yard. Again, this isn’t
playtime.
As your dog learns what’s expected of him, the next phase is to
keep the dog on leash, out of the cage. Tie the leash around a belt
loop so that you can go about your daily routine with both hands
free. Keep one eye on the dog. When you see his “gotta go” signals,
drop what you’re doing and go. Some people are successful in
hanging a bell on the doorknob. They ring the bell whenever they
take the dog out. The dog learns, over time, to ring the bell when
it has to go. Others teach their dogs to “speak” as a signal to go
out.
Our dogs are always crated when we leave the house. At this
point, they see us reaching for their crate toys (which we stuff
with a little peanut butter or kibble) and run for their crates. We
don’t necessarily even lock the crates, but they are available to
the dogs at all times. It’s their “room,” a safe place they can
always go to.
Just a note of caution and safety: never leave a collar or
harness on your dog in the crate. It can get caught and cause
problems.
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