Anything else I can try to get her to settle?

blackcob

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Daxy-dog has improved drastically with regards being left alone - when she arrived she couldn't so much as be in another room for five seconds before howling the house down - and can now be left for up to four hours without so much as a peep which I'm really pleased about as it's highly unlikely she'll ever be left longer than that. After a few initial accidents she's also now totally clean when left. :)

However, it's clear she's still desperately unhappy about it. From what I hear from sitting in the next room (having slammed the door and pretended to go out) or leaving a dictaphone recording she spends the entire time trotting up and down the stairs, pacing to the kitchen window and back and just basically wandering around and whining a bit.

It doesn't seem to matter if we're gone for 15 minutes or two hours, the reaction is the same. As soon as we get back, after ten minutes of 'OMG YOU'RE HOOOOME!' she just crashes out and sleeps for hours, like she normally does in the afternoon if I'm home. She has a great big walk right before we leave her, always, so she's knackered and ready for a sleep - then she totally wears herself out by not settling until we're back. :(

The kitchen is dog-proofed with a stair gate and latches on the doors, has her bed in it (sprayed with DAP spray), a bazillion toys, telly on in the next room, chews and kongs stuffed with tasty things (even super-naughty cheese) and as many of my sweaty t-shirts as can be nicked from the washing pile to try and put her at ease.

What else can I try, or is it something that will just come with time? She's very seldom left, and usually only for an hour between me leaving and OH coming back from work, but I am feeling terribly guilty knowing that she's anxious the whole time.

In other news, she now recalls to a whistle 98% of the time and I even managed to call her off a rabbit yesterday (with a 30ft lead trailing behind, just in case ;)). I'm still not sure she'll ever be able to be let off completely but this means there's now several safe places she can run with a long line attached. :)
 
Although I am not used to her breed, my thoughts are that she will settle more with time. I wouldnt take any notice of the response when you are still there having pretended to go out, she will know damn well that you are still in the house :p :D but I am liking the dictaphone idea! When I have had rescues (albeit that they were greyhounds and lurchers) some were like this initially but all got used to being left in their new home pretty quickly :)
 
"after ten minutes of 'OMG YOU'RE HOOOOME!'"

There's your first mistake - you don't do ten seconds of that, never mind ten minutes. You come in, you close the door and you say hi to each other when you decide, not Dax.
Making a big deal of coming and going will reinforce her urge to panic when you leave.

Essentially they are pack animals which is why some of them display this sort of separation anxiety. I am sure she will settle with time :)
 
That's her reaction, not ours! :p We're all about the no touch, no talk, no eye contact - she hoons around for a bit then gets acknowledged when she stops and sits. The first few times she would race around the house, howling and jumping up which soon stopped, thank god. In fact she doesn't jump up at all now, even had the MIL over yesterday who was greeted with a polite but excited sit (you know the kind, sitting because they know they should but with the bum waggling like mad underneath). :p

I've even adopted a weird routine of putting my shoes on and getting my keys then sitting down to watch telly for a bit so nothing triggers 'OMG you're going!' for her. OH thinks I am mad, I keep telling him she's secretly a smart dog and can put two and two together... then I remember that she fell into a drainage ditch this afternoon and wonder if I am perhaps being over-cautious. :rolleyes:

Gazehound - the dictaphone is so I know if I have to apologise to the neighbours or not, and how much exactly I have to grovel. ;)

Argh, I just wish she would sleep!
 
I'm sure she will settle more with time:) - it is still early days for her with you. My two slope off and sneak on the bed as soon as I start getting ready to go out in anything other then 'yard/walkies' clothes!!:D:D:D Once she knows youa re coming back I'm sure she will do the same - then we will have 'How do I get Daxoff the bed/sofa/ when we go out?' posts:D:D:D
 
I think the answer is in your post, "she isleft no longer than an hour" this is not enought to create a routine to leave her any length of time, she is spending too much time in your company, I personally would use the crate she had, and get her back in there, u need to do this when u are in aswell as out, so when u are in the living room watching tv, she needs to spend time in the crate, or when u are doing housework, u are giving her to much space to pace and be anxious in, she is a pack dog and more so then other breeds does not take to kindly to time spent alone, so u need the routine and it's always start small and increase not the other way around.
If she will still go in her crate, reinstate it, Im currently re crating a staff that has had it crate took away Arghhhhhhhhhh, it won't get it's way though and the noise is far worse than anything u will hear:D:D:D well was.....she is silent now:rolleyes:
 
Argh, I ditched the crate because she was weeing in it continually - much to my confusion, I've never had one do that before!

She now has a bed in the kitchen and she's confined in there when we leave, although due to the unique conformation of our house I had to put the stair gate at the top of the stairs rather than the bottom so she can get up and down those too. :rolleyes: She sleeps there at night too and knows 'onyerbed', although getting her to stay there is another matter.

She's left for an hour on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, three hours on Thursday and Saturday and not at all on Sundays. From next week she'll be left for an additional hour most weekday evenings as I'm going back to work, eeek.

I do wonder if I'm mollycoddling her with too much time spent with me; OH remarked that she tries to howl and whine when I leave, even if he's still there, until he tells her to shut up.
 
She def needs to spend more time being comfortable with her own company, so def practice leaving her in her space when u are in a fair bit more rather than her lying with or following u, if a dog on the rare occasion urinates or deficates here, I down size the crate to as little as I can get away with and place a plastic bed inside so the dog literally onlu has space to curl up in the bed not sprawl in the crate, it usually works straight away I then upsize crate again and still they hold, there is method in the madness im sure....there must be, can u imagine all the training tricks I try:eek::D
 
In a fit of desperation I wedged the washing basket against the back of the crate to make it smaller and the swine p*ssed all over that too! :eek: She has some funny ideas about weeing, she'll only go on the stable yard or in our back yard (never ever on a walk) or, of course, in the bloody crate. :p

I will give it another try tomorrow and head out without her, it's probably time OH stepped in and gave her some boundaries for when I'm out if she's pining after me all the time.
 
Hi BC, have been reading your posts on Dax with interest having owned and involved with the breed for a number of years, my oldest girl just passed away a few weeks ago aged 17!!

Just with ref to your first post about her being off lead - just be very very careful, you really cannot ever trust this breed off the lead as they are bred first and foremost to run, and secondly to chase smaller animals! Mine had been known to "pretend" to be well behaved and then all of a sudden she'd be off!!

In fact I even took her to obedience school when she was about the same age as Dax (we lived in Canada at the time), and she was really well behaved in all the classes, we got to the test at the end of the course and during the down stay, she got up, trotted ever so casually to the end of the ring, and jumped out! (luckily the instructor caught her!) Went a bit down hill from there... Our overall score... 63 out of 200... Fail!

All those that I've known have taken to the crate very well, so I'm afraid there's little additional help I can give here.

Good luck with her!
 
Hi BC, have been reading your posts on Dax with interest having owned and involved with the breed for a number of years, my oldest girl just passed away a few weeks ago aged 17!!

Gosh, you have my every condolence but what an age to reach, how amazing. :) Do post pictures if you have any, we need a few more sledding breeds on here to combat the spangle army!

Don't worry, it isn't my intention ever to let the bugger off completely. It's just that I have access to two secure paddocks - well, I say 'secure', one has an ancient old thorn hedge that's as dense as they come with sheep wire in parts too, the other has brand new sheep fencing that's stapled into the ground and topped with barbed wire, I'm under no illusions that she couldn't jump out of either if she wanted to - and it's nice to know that she can safely have the run of those once a day with the long line clipped to her collar in case I have to stamp on it, lol. It's in the middle of arable fields so there's no livestock or roads nearby, it's proven ideal for recall training. :)

There's one other lady in our village with a husky who we met a few days ago; she lost her nine year old bitch last year when she suddenly took off and ran a clear mile to the main road and got hit by a car. :( Again this was a dog who up until that point had always recalled 100%...

I just can't wait until Dax is old enough to run and pull in harness, we've had the odd little jog around the block and she adores it, I'm itching to get her hitched to the bike for some real running now. :)

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Aww, she'll love running with you in her harness, it's one of the best feelings in the world! There were lots of huskies at crufts in the CaniX competition, looked like great fun!

I recommend the harnesses that are sold from http://www.spiffydog.co.uk/, they have walking, training and x-back harnesses, both foam and fleecey. They are really fab!

I do have some photos of my old girl and will try to get them up on here when I get the chance and figure out how to do it!

:)
 
What a beautiful girl - those 'eyebrows' are familiar, lol. :) I am not looking forward to her growing a coat that impressive, though, even if it does look rather snuggly!

Thanks for the link, I've been looking into buying her a cheap training harness as she's nowhere near fully grown yet and I can't justify buying a succession of proper ones. I unearthed my ancient Microskate scooter from the loft yesterday which will either prove a brilliant way to exercise her around town or end in my unfortunate demise - we'll find out in a few more weeks. :p
 
Erm in a year or so get another <runs>

lol Some great advice given so not got anything to add as I`ve never had this problem with my lot

Katie - great to see another sled dog mummy on the board, welcome :D
 
Out of interest, what age to you start running the dogs in harness, or indeed, running them? :p

We tend not to do any strenuous running, pulling or jumping until 12 months to prevent wear and tear on the joints (have no idea if huskies are prone to ED or HD!) and in some of the disciplines, including the AD, which I wish to do (20km bike run with two vet stops and a short obedience test at the end) you cannot try for the qualification until a certain age, and I think you also need scores done before you can apply for it.

Been speaking to another forum user's sister :) you know who you are :) who is running her lovely all-black GSD in harness, the GSD Mafia is taking over! :p

Sorry for hijack OP :)
 
Sorry for hijack OP :)

No worries, I am very interested in the answer! :p

I know that they have to be over 12 months for canicross competitions but that applies to all dogs, not just the huskies.

Her majesty goes for a gentle jog around the block every other day or so and is desperate to do more and go faster, hence my digging out of the old scooter, though I do think she's too young for that just yet. Can't wait, I'm going to break at least one limb. :p
 
Oh, while I'm here I suppose I'd better update - she stayed on her own for two hours this morning and one and a half this evening without a single peep, and when I went in after the morning leaving she was asleep on her bed. :D

She did disgrace herself in the evening by opening the fridge and licking (but thankfully not eating) a block of butter and eating a Dairylea cheese slice (leaving the wrapping) so I'm going to have to brave Mothercare tomorrow to buy a fridge lock. :rolleyes:
 
Yeah, but dogs don't always know what is good for them (Like B, no one told him he couldn't fly, that time he crashed to the ground from a very great height :p)
Not long now and no doubt Cyrus and the harness guys will be along soon to tell me what a worry-wort I am :p

Haha, flowery farts await you! Well done with the separation progress :)
 
Our Setter worked out how to undo the Mothercare child lock:eek: - hope Dax isn't as bright!!;):D:D:D

Seeing as she can already undo the safety drawer catches this doesn't bode well! :eek::eek: :p

I am slightly reassured by the fact that she ignored the trays of chicken thighs and beef mince on the same shelf, she can't be that bright. :p
 
Yeah, but dogs don't always know what is good for them (Like B, no one told him he couldn't fly, that time he crashed to the ground from a very great height :p)
Not long now and no doubt Cyrus and the harness guys will be along soon to tell me what a worry-wort I am :p

Haha, flowery farts await you! Well done with the separation progress :)

Some kennels allow their pups to go out on short runs with an experienced team/team member from about 6 months old
I have never allowed mine to do anything really until they where about 9 months and that was pulling a small tyre for a few metres, slowly increasing the distance till they are pulling the tyre for about 1 mile at around 11 months old we then progress to the bike/rig from there slowly building up fitness levels.
Dogs arent allowed to compete in harness till they are a year old.

Coming into this time of year I will not allow my dogs to run excessively unless its under about 5 degrees and humidity is low
 
Thanks for that, interesting :)

Is that (latter part of your post) to prevent overheating?
Not much danger of that where I live :o

Exactly CC, when I say excessive exercise I mean running in harness, during the summer they get taken out to an enclosed area for free running very early in the morning and again late at night.
They do slow themselves down and become quite lazy compared to usual at this time of year
 
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