by Sarah Salt
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30 September 2019
What are the benefits of crate training your dog? There are multiple benefits of crate training your dog – you will find it especially useful during the puppy years, and as it turns out, if they are ever injured or sick! Although some question the use of a crate (it does look like a cage after all) the benefits of training your pup to be comfortable with a crate are multiple. Trained correctly, your dog will come to love the crate and see it as a safe-haven, providing a place to escape noise and stress and get some much-needed rest. When to start crate training? The sooner the better! Obviously, as with all puppy training, the younger you can expose a pup to something the more quickly they will accept and adapt to it. Leaving them in the crate can also help accelerate toilet training. Get them used to the crate gradually with toys and treats – the excellent Zach George Dog Training can show you how! Escape the rat-race Your dog’s crate can be a place to escape for a much-needed rest, a break from kids or other dogs, and even a portable home that will always be familiar no matter where you are. As a natural den animal, dogs will take to a crate very easily, just like a child’s bedroom. Toilet training A crate encourages a dog’s instinct not to mess where they sleep, helping your dog control her bladder, and accelerating the toilet training process. Staying out of trouble Using a crate is a great way to keep your dog from getting into mischief when you can’t supervise them directly. When you are busy, and your attention is not on your pooch, it can be the perfect time for your dog to spend some down time in their crate. The benefits to you and your dog? You can enjoy peace-of-mind when leaving your dog home alone, and that she is comfortable, happy, and not chewing your sofa. She can enjoy the privacy and security of a den of her own! My own experience We first saw the benefit of a crate trained pup when on holiday. Renting a dog-friendly place and knowing that our pet would be happy to be left alone for a few hours was a game-changer. It meant that our pet could come on holiday with us and we still had the freedom to go places that we couldn’t take them. The second time we really saw the benefit was when puppy broke a bone and had to be rested. That she was already used to a crate made the whole process so much easier and led to a faster recovery.