I am a definite believer in using dog crates... appropriately. I never teach someone to use them as a punishment, or as a way of neglecting a dog. They are a temporary bed to keep a dog safe when you can't supervise them. That is all. I teach dogs to like their crates. They WANT to get in there, and not because I'm forcing them to go. Crates have a long term usage benefit.
Many people think too short term... "my dog doesn't need that"... "it is cruel"... "my dog sleeps with me"... and so on. However, if you have been around dogs for as long as I have, you see that one day, maybe years in the future, you might need a crate and a dog that doesn't hate the crate.
For example.. have you ever had to deal with a dog that got a serious injury, had surgery, and then had to be confined to prevent injury as the dog healed? What about the dog that has to be confined at the vets office? What about the dog that has to be transported, driven or flown, to another location? What about in some kind of natural or manmade disaster? You NEED to own an adult-sized crate for your dog, and teach them NOW to love it. Just in case. It could mean the difference between life and death.
They are also useful with young puppies to keep them out of mischief. I don't want a pup to learn to self-reward by chewing on power cords, walls, shoes, carpets, etc. Nor do I want them to wander all around unsupervised in the home when they are not yet house trained. How you train a crate is a completely different article, so I won't go into that here.
For most dogs, I recommend the PetMate Vari Kennels. I like the ones that you assemble with wing nuts. They are sturdier, in my experience. Yes, there are other really heavy duty brands and types of crates (which I have written about earlier on this blog), but the average dog in the average situation will be fine with the Vari Kennel design. Here is what to get, pick a size that is appropriate for the adult dog, even if your dog is still a puppy.
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