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| | #16 | |
| Yorkie Yakker Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Mountain View, CA
Posts: 35
| Quote:
If you’ve ever watched the dog whisperer, the greatest lesson learned from the show is that the majority of behavior problems are fixed simply through the dog having more exercise and leadership. Leadership provides mental exercise; while playing and walking/running provide physical exercise. Long hours in a crate deprive a high energy soul of both. If this little soldier (because if dogs aren’t soldiers, nobody is) must go eight hours without leadership, the little teddy bear wolf should at least have the freedom to play and eliminate. Sure it’s a mess, that’s why you confine the little bear to a playpen at first. I only write this to encourage people not to crate their little ones for long hours, not to judge anyone of piss anybody off. | |
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| Welcome Guest! | |
| | #17 |
| Yorkie Yakker Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Mountain View, CA
Posts: 35
| Here's a pretty good article on the topic achieving house-training without a crate: http://warreneckstein.com/pettips_caging.html |
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| | #18 | |
| I heart Hootie & Hobbs Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: USA
Posts: 7,149
| Quote:
I have a 24x18 wire crate that my yorkie does well in. I put a nice fluffy bed and blankets in there for her. As long as your pup is completely crate trained (i.e. won't go to the bathroom in the crate) then I think a bigger crate would not be a problem at all. My little puppy has never gone to the bathroom in her crate so that is why she gets to have a bigger one wth more room. Glad you and your wife worked out a good schedule for taking your little one out. | |
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| | #19 |
| Yorkie Yakker Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Australia
Posts: 73
| Bailey sleeps in her crate at night and goes for 8 hours without any problem (at 9 weeks old). We have never had an accident in her crate. During the day if I am not home she is in her play pen which has her crate (open door) for her to sleep in, her basket of toys, a pee pad and her food/water. I havent left her longer than about 6 hours but she has been fine. When I am home all her things stay in the play pen, I just leave one side open so she can come in and out. She either sits and plays at my feet or she is in the playpen, so she mustn't mind it |
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| | #20 |
| Senior Yorkie Talker Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: NYC
Posts: 132
| I have a 4 month old and i leave him in a x-pen with bed, toys and wee wee pad. He does good for the time i am out to work. When we go to bed i crate him enough for him to get up and turn around, my crate is adjustable when he grow bigger. I put a cover on it. I tell him "bedtime" and he knows and He would be in there for 6-7 hours and when my alarm hits to wake me up he wakes up too and i put him in my x-pen and he relieves himself. I tried so many crates and return so many crate. Big crates are no good it gives them room to pee so i finally got the right size for him just for nite time. He is good. He dont bark or whine. When he is in there he makes himself comfy and plop his head down.
__________________ Lisa. |
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| | #21 |
| YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: North eastern Illinois Suburbs
Posts: 1,669
| "If you force an animal that has roamed the earth freely for millions of years to spend most of the day light hours in a 2 by 1 foot area, you’re naturally going to end up with an anxious and possibly more aggressive dog. That pent up energy has to go somewhere, and often aggression is a release mechanism. The “we are what we make them” statement applies in that an unfulfilled dog eventually shows behavior problems. We may call them “domestic animals”, but inside, they still have the needs of a wolf. That’s why if you read this forum, every other post is “my little baby is biting/barking/crazy, and I don’t know why”. The reason: A Yorkie is a wolf with a teddy bear disguise. Admitting that is the first step to relief." These horror stories that you often hear are simply because there isn't a BALANCE in those dogs lives. You can (I do this REGULARLY) have a dog crated for the times I mentioned, with ZERO issues, so long as there is a balance. You cannot be firm and not be fair. So, give your dog something constructive to do and think about when you are with him. When you cannot be with him, do what is safest for him and yourself and that would often times be to confine him and w/ our little ones, that often means a smaller space-i.e. a crate. With the variety of purebreds out there today, there is very little that they still share in common w/ them. I would go as far as to venture that SOME have atributes akin to a wolf, but their responces to your manipulations are COMPLETELY different than that of a wolf. Therefore, please for the love of god quit comparing them. Even our domestic dogs have a different digestive system than their wolf counterparts. There is enough physiological change that to compare them to wolves would be like comparing us to OUR ancestors! Yes, yes, we're related, but we've come a long way and while wolves and dogs don't have the same length of seperation and breeding through history that we do, they've made leaps and bonds faster than even we have. POINT is: Dogs really are what we mold them to be, within reason. Crating your dog is NOT a negative, so long as when you do have the time to spend w/ them, you are. And I don't mean that you take them out and let them aimlessly run at the dog park, give them something constructive to do W/ you...more one on one. Develop your dog w/ yourself, not just w/ others and others dogs. |
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| | #22 |
| Yorkie Yakker Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Tennessee
Posts: 38
| Have a question has anyone tried the second nature brand litter boxes? Need commits on this.. Pros or cons...Thanks |
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| | #23 | ||||||
| Yorkie Yakker Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Mountain View, CA
Posts: 35
| Quote:
The one con is puppies will play with the litter, but it's not nearly as messy as when they rip up the pad. I tried both, and the pad was a horrible mess when she ripped it up. But with the dog litter, I just have to clean up several pieces of paper pellots that may be lying around. Quote:
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Last edited by P-did; 11-18-2006 at 11:24 AM. | ||||||
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| | #24 |
| YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: North eastern Illinois Suburbs
Posts: 1,669
| "So of course, I made an effort to make sure everybody thought twice before they would torture their animal like that. If people like you post here that "eight hours is okay", I fear some people might actually believe that. So I'm just putting in a little effort to make sure less dogs out there are suffering." ROFL-WHAT??? So I suppose that I've been "torturing" animals all my adult life and make a successful living from doing just that. That's a bit extreme. And it sounds like you believe everything you read. It's best, imo...since we both clearly have them, that one should read a book and then practice it w/ your own PET...not wolf. What you've read simply doesn't sit completely right w/ me. If you're to go on to try and work w/ dogs professionally, then you simply MUST do waaaay much more than read some book. You must have loads of hands on experiences w/ thousands of variables and be able to take your base method and tweak it oh so slightly to fit each case. Books often do not have all the answers...just suggestions and ideas. When a book-if you're a reader-fails to give you the answers or results you were looking for, then you consult a professional and hope they're worth their grain of salt. Putting your average pet dog in a crate for the amounts of time I said and then properly handling them when you get home is nothing shy of PROPER REARING. It looks like we will need to agree to disagree on this entirely! |
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| | #25 | |||
| Yorkie Yakker Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Mountain View, CA
Posts: 35
| Quote:
Of course we shouldn't believe everything we read, but reading and studying text from experts with more experience than any of us is a key part of reaching the top of our games in any profession. Just because something works decently doesn't mean it's the best or most humane way. Keep reading and studying to improve your trade. Quote:
Here is another source that informs on the harmfulness of regular long-term crating: http://www.greyhoundog.org/Faq/GreatCrateDebate.html Here's a direct quote from the author of the above article, speaking with over 20 years of experience with over 4,000 greyhounds: Quote:
I just pray, for the dog's sake that you cease from recommending long-hour crating. I have more sources than I can count that suggest it is not only unnecessary, but abusive. Last edited by P-did; 11-20-2006 at 10:44 AM. | |||
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| | #26 |
| YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: North eastern Illinois Suburbs
Posts: 1,669
| "Keep reading and studying to improve your trade." Wise advise, I hope you practise what you preach. "I have more sources than I can count that suggest it is not only unnecessary, but abusive." Sighting sources isn't impressive to be quite honest when it comes to things of this nature. They're all well and good for people to read, but unless you've personally gone through and practised these methods for YEARS on VARIOUS dogs of VARIOUS ages and sexes and circumstances, you can't realistically offer proper advice or recommendations on anything but what you've experienced yourself. Not what someone else is telling you to do from a book. How could you possibly promote something that you have NO IDEA is a load of crap, or is actually legitamite? I'm CERTAIN that there is a book out there that promotes the "best" and most humane and effective way to train your dog. And you would completely disagree w/ it. Someone else on the other hand may swear by it. So, site away, please do. I'm sure it'll make good reading to someone, somewhere. I agree that I don't know everything, but experience has brought me to know that you are absolutely wrong in thinking that in many circumstances to crate your domestic dog is more detrimental than to let it run freely in a larger area. There are more risks (not just mentally, but also physically) to do this, than to crate your loved one. Honestly, that right there tells me your experience level. Not what you are able to copy and paste from the internet or some book. Hands on is where the true knowledge comes from. And MANY of those authors that you have sighted really only have limited experience in what they're writing. They may site themselves as being in the practise for X amount of years, but in reality-for example-they're counting more years in than they actually spent on "that" subject. You should write your own book. It would be just as competent and well versed as a few of those other authors. I never said I did/did not read those books, but I am familiar w/ the authors and that's all I've got to say about them! Your opinions are yours, as mine are mine. We come from two very different worlds on this subject. If you feel it's inhumane to crate a dog, that's fine. I will continue to advise what has worked for me and my clients on a consistent basis and for myself...that's really what it's about-CONSISTENT RESULTS and happy owners and well adjusted dogs. |
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| | #27 |
| I heart Hootie & Hobbs Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: USA
Posts: 7,149
| Ok, on the crate training issue between P-did and k9trainer, I think it ENTIRELY depends on the individual dog. I have a male and a female yorkie who are full brother and sister. My female has done fabulously in her crate and can stay in her crate for up to 8 hours with no behavioral issues or negative side effects and she doesn't soil her crate. My male, on the other hand, could not stand his crate and it did cause behavioral issues if we put him in his crate and he would soil his crate even if he was in it only for a hour. Now that my dogs are adults and my husband and I work full-time, we do what is best for the individual dog....my female stays in her crate while we are at work and my male is confined to a room. They both do fabulously with no accidents or behavioral issues whatsoever. Thus, it is my firm opinion that whether crate-training is good or bad is based on the individual dog. |
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| | #28 |
| YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: North eastern Illinois Suburbs
Posts: 1,669
| RLC- "My male, on the other hand, could not stand his crate and it did cause behavioral issues if we put him in his crate and he would soil his crate even if he was in it only for a hour." The only issue I have w/ what you've said about your circumstance, and I'm honestly not disagreeing! (sp?) lol Is that IF you wanted to, or needed to, you could teach your male to be okay w/ his crating. Just because a dog doesn't like it and naturally freaks out or doesn't do well, doesn't mean it's not what's right for him in the end. Take that rule of thumb and apply it to any other aspect of your dogs life or even a child's life. They often don't know what is best for them and they often may not agree w/ everything that you do w/ them or for them, but in the end, it's up to you to decide and to teach. Just because it doesn't come natural, means little. |
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| | #29 | |
| I heart Hootie & Hobbs Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: USA
Posts: 7,149
| Quote:
Oh I know! We crated him for 6 months of his life and he NEVER got used to it. My female hated the crate at first but learned to love it after a couple of months of being in there. It definately didn't come natural to her. But I figure if my male didn't like it after 6 months and it was causing him behavioral issues, then he was not meant to be in a crate. | |
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| | #30 |
| YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: North eastern Illinois Suburbs
Posts: 1,669
| Agreed. Either you take another training approach to it, or if it simply doesn't come natural and you've invested 6 months in it and it's not a big deal or a neccessity for you, then that makes sense. |
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