Showing posts with label separation anxiety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label separation anxiety. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2021

Crate Training, Puppies, and Misconceptions about Separation Anxiety

When confined or "stuck" alone in an unfamiliar location, every puppy instinct says to cry out for help -- which is why puppies often get very upset when first crated.


Two puppies, each in a small wire crate with a food bowl. One puppy is calm, the other is yelling and pawing at the door.

Three primary factors that go into why a puppy cries in a crate when you first start crate training:

  1. Isolation
  1. Confinement
  1. Unfamiliar environment.
Later, when they've learned a bit more about the world, a 4th big factor comes into play:
A basic rule of training is to only change one variable at a time (when possible). So, with puppies, I try to introduce them to a crate first with their littermates (and/or mom), this removes all 3 factors from play so that the crate environment becomes familiar in a likewise familiar location.

4. FOMO (fear of missing out)

Later, I will crate them side by side or 2-3 puppies together for meals. This isolates the confinement factor for them to learn about -- without also being isolated or in an unfamiliar environment. Gradually, the isolation factor will be increased -- from puppies in sight or even touching distance of others to just having littermates in proximity (can hear/smell but not see easily).

First meal in a closed crate for both of these boys. The yelling lasted 30 minutes and was followed by a 30 minute nap before they went outside for a potty break.


I don't believe most puppies are mature enough to handle isolation without stressing about it until after 7 weeks of age. (Of course, puppies worldwide have had to learn about isolation far earlier than 7 weeks -- whether because they were singleton puppies or because they were separated from mom and littermates at earlier ages. So often you hear of pups being sent home at 5 weeks -- just about the time they are eating and pooping and mom is no longer cleaning up -- that is, right when pups become work to keep clean and socialized to the world and people. And coinciding with this is a great number of pet dogs who end up with horrible separation anxiety.)


So I try to introduce the crate as a part of the environment in the whelping box and elsewhere at about 5 weeks -- puppies learn that they are shelter and napping places.


Around 6-7 weeks, I will start feeding pups in the crate(s) with the door open. And about 7 weeks, I shut them in the crate with a meal. Door closed. Locked in. And the crying is dramatic! But it will diminish and they generally fall asleep within 30 minutes. Because they are only facing 1 major stressor -- confinement -- without the elements of isolation and unfamiliarity/feeling unsafe.


Hopefully, by the time they go home at 8 weeks, they will be that much more prepared to face the new (necessary) and inescapable stressors of a new environment and the abrupt absence of their littermates and mom. I encourage new puppy owners to use the crate but not be super strict about it in the first 3 days. It's OK to be relaxed and let the puppies gain familiarity with their environment (outside of the crate and the new crate) and with the feeling of not having a sibling always right next to them. There's plenty of time to tighten the rules later - after the pup has adapted to the new family and new home.


So, when your 8 week old pup cries in her crate (or shut in the kitchen/laundry room/basement)-- it's not separation anxiety, it's *normal*. It's a rough part of learning about life with humans. It's instinct saying you're stuck and you're alone and you need to be rescued, so you better holler for help.