
The drama is now beginning to unfold. New lodger viewed the property on Saturday and moved in Tuesday evening. 1st night pup howled and as new lodger was starting a new job the next day I went down after 20 minutes and put pup in a cage in my room with myself and other dog. This didn't do much to appease him as he spent the next 3 hours panting heavily and turning round and round in his cage. He wouldn't settle and as I was also working the next day I eventually took him out of the cage, put him in a down stay on the lead at the side of my bed. After about an hour (3.15am!) he went to sleep and my alarm went off at 5.45 to get up for work, walk them etc.
the next night I was exhausted so went to bed at 10pm and said to new lodger that if he was still muttering and grumbling in the kitchen when he went to bed I would go to him. New lodger went into kitchen to get a drink before bed and the barking started and this led to even more talking and howling from the pup. I decided to go sleep in the living room and ended up letting pup out the cage to lie on the kitchen floor and at this point he went to sleep. The bizarre thing is that when I woke up through the night he had gone back to his cage to sleep in!
Me sleeping on the sofa is not practical longer term and I need some advice how to handle this. If I was in the house alone I would leave him to howl as I did when he was a pup (this ceased after 15-20 minutes and only went on for a few nights). Last night he was howling and grumbling for 2 hours with no breaks. As I have a paying tenant who expected peace and quiet as part of the deal I cannot do this.
the options that my sleep deprived brain has come up with are to stay on the sofa until lodger goes onto night shift or away for a few days and let pup howl himself hoarse then to see that I don't come running or attach a leash to my bed and let him sleep upstairs now. The leash is to prevent him getting on the bed or too close to my other dog as that has always been her place and it is unfair on her to upset this. the other thing is that I don't want to share my bed with a rottie every night - or any night for that matter!
Please give me some objective advice with practical solutions to implement. Ear plugs for the lodger is not what I have in mind!
FWIW, as well as lodger moving in, I took down the pup's pen at the weekend and he now has a 48" cage rather than the pen which I had been gradually reducing in size in anticipation of changing to a cage permanently. He has no problems with cages and has been introduced to them from day 1.
The artist formerly known as cheekychow! - with a staffy and a rottie not a chow, but very cheeky!