
Woke in the morning and realised he hadn't awoke in the night - he's been in our bed ever since
and never wees at night!!
)

making sure the alarm was set early so I could get up before them - just opening the door again to let them out. Mine have always had a teddy to snuggle up with aswell and the radio on very, very low just so it is not too quiet as I think that leaving their family 'huddle' and sleeping on their own can be quite strange for them. >bison frisse
> retricol
) we do not ridicule posters on their description of dog?


>her crying probably was because of being scared etc but all of the training and books i read suggested to do what i did so
Even some which are extremely useful and informative often contain some bizarre old wive's tales relating to animal husbandry that quite simply shock most experienced owners and breeders - just as recipe books have come and gone in fashion over many decades so too have dog books. In short, don't believe all that you read simply because it found its way to a bookshelf - after all many writers on animal care relating to dozens of species actually pay for these books to be published themselves LOL and several find little interest for them!> if i would have kept going to her everytime she cried there would have been no point crate training her!
Puppies have for centuries been successfully and kindly trained to cope with leaving their dam and siblings before crates were ever invented - it's just a tool to help towards making the transition easier and should not be mistaken for a tool to "put up and shut up" a new family addition when at its most vulnerable and insecure!>the maximum she ever cried was20-30 mins and that was after she had just been to the toilet so i knew she didnt need that!
>i knew i didnt want her to sleep on my bed for the next 15 years
That's when appropriate, patient and kind training comes in!>I was only advising the poster to what i did which has been incredibly successful
>she was crying becuase she was scared (and so wanted attention)

This, IMO, therefore compounds the fact that it is important for the mental wellbeing of the puppy to not "feel" as though it is "abandoned" at all and this is best served by methods which don't involve bringing it home, away from its dam and siblings, into unfamiliar territory and immediately at day's end shutting it away on it's own for the first time in it's short but company-intense life .....
I respect other peoples methods no matter how much or little experience they have and weather it is a method I would personally use or not.
The blanket for scent sounds like a good idea
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