For Ali's shower I moved Gideon's crate to the garage (it lives in the kitchen in the doorway to the study). It was so nice to have that passway open again. To get that eyesore out of my kitchen. But someone was missing it big time . . .
Gideon was a crate-trained puppy. By far, in my opinion, the best way to train a dog. He was housebroken within weeks of us bringing him home. He responded within weeks of training to "Get in your crate" — an obedience much appreciated when I needed to mop the floor, was entertaining a non-dog-lover houseguest, or had a contractor doing repairs and didn't need a puppy at his feet.
When Giddy earned full run of the house, he still would choose to sleep in his crate, curling up in a ball in its cramped space. It is his safe haven, his home. And so when I relegated it to the garage, he felt homeless, lost. I put a blanket in the spot where the crate had been, thinking he might sleep there, but he missed the walls, the roof over his head. So now it is back. Gideon is happy, and I have a big cage in my kitchen that attracts dust bunnies at its base and makes maneuvering around my tiny kitchen even more of a challenge.
He looks adorable in his own little spot. Jackie
ReplyDeleteBoy, is he loved! What a cutie.
ReplyDeleteHome Sweet Home!!
ReplyDeleteXXDenise
What a little cutie! That is his den. The place where he knows he is completely safe.
ReplyDeleteWe all need a safe spot to feel cozy. :)
ReplyDeleteHome sweet doggie home! Our puppy Chloe has her crate in our master bathroom. She won't sleep in it, as she prefers to sleep on the bathroom floor with her nose to the closed door...just listening to us sleeping in the bedroom at night. She now uses the crate as her own little bathroom, with the puppy pad in it! I'm such a bad Mommy..no dicipline.
ReplyDeleteMaureen
My dogs love their boxes too. When we travel, the crates are a home away from home for them, so they feel safe in an unknown place.
ReplyDelete