grannys gone and done it

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Quote: Keep at it camping! If he's already responding, he's malleable. He's been living a different life for how many years? It's going to take a couple of months at least to get him used to his new life.

People do crate training to help a new dog learn manners in the house. I don't like crates, but Belle learned to stay on her bed when told. Our dogs do not have the run of the house, nor do they get to sleep in people beds or on furniture. (my husband's rule) No dogs allowed in the kitchen while cooking and never feed them from the table (my rule). If you have the attitude that being in the house is a privilege, the dog becomes much more respectful of your space.
 
I'm a fan of crate training. Gives the dog a "safe place", and keeps them from trouble and getting into bad stuff when you're not watching them.

Peach was destructo dog until she was three. She had to be crated whenever I wasn't at home.
 
camping, he must be trainable if you have taught him off the counters. very funny video. at least they didnt say theres no hope .
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I like crate training, just not the crate itself (house is too small!). I would use one if that's what it took to get the job done for a particular dog. Belle's bed is her safe place. She gets her treats and tummy rubs on her bed.
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Keep at it camping! If he's already responding, he's malleable. He's been living a different life for how many years? It's going to take a couple of months at least to get him used to his new life.

People do crate training to help a new dog learn manners in the house. I don't like crates, but Belle learned to stay on her bed when told. Our dogs do not have the run of the house, nor do they get to sleep in people beds or on furniture. (my husband's rule) No dogs allowed in the kitchen while cooking and never feed them from the table (my rule). If you have the attitude that being in the house is a privilege, the dog becomes much more respectful of your space.
Ditto X 10. Respect. No access to the kitchen, no playing in the house, no access to furniture. No begging, I only feed them in their bowl at meal time. I do crate train mine and use the crate as a temporary time out during training. I make the crate a happy place they like to go, but begging, barking, zoomies, 10 min time out during training phase. It's so much easier to start with very few privileges and relax later than it is to un-train bad habits.
 
We have him crated when we can't keep eyes on him. But we have a big laundry room with plenty of space for a big crate. He's always been a working dog, so he doesn't lounge. That's the hard part. I'm a cat person (chicken person) and I like cat-like dogs who don't give me a lot of attention. Ben needs constant touches and pets and rubs and cuddles. It's exhausting.

We're the same about beds and furniture: they can come up if invited, but they sleep in crates at night. They have to sit and stay at their bowls and wait for the command to eat. No grazing the table or (the toughest) baby hands.

Jewel had zoomies the other day, but we were outside. It's funny to watch.

Ben has slowed down eating. Think he's finally getting full? He's put on some weight in just the week he's been here. I'm going to wait until Tuesday to take a comparison pic.
 
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