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Crate expectations part 4: Building Relaxation

What happens after the 1-minute mark?

Once my dog can stay in their crate for a minute without getting up, I introduce a different kind of reinforcer: a long-lasting chew such as a frozen Kong or a bone. At the 1-minute mark, my crate (or mat) training starts to look very different from building a duration stay for obedience. Once my dog has understood the concept of staying put, I’ll add relaxation to the picture.

Introducing a chew in the crate

Phoebe demonstrates this step on a mat. For crate training, just imagine the mat were a crate with the door open. You don’t have to watch the entire video – it’s long and boring, just like relaxing in a crate or on a mat should be for the observer! However, check out the last 30 seconds of this video: Phoebe doesn’t want to leave her mat! That’s the kind of association we want to build to mats and crates!

Transitioning to using your crate in real life

Congratulations! Once you get to this point, you’ve already conquered the most difficult part of crate training! There’s a few tricks that will help you transition from these structured training session to relaxation for longer periods of time, when you’re not sitting next to your dog and with the door closed.

Removing yourself from the picture

Do exactly what you did in the previous step: offer a Kong or bone to your dog and set your timer of your phone to random intervals. The door to the crate should still be open at this stage.

What if your dog gets up and comes out?

No big deal. Trade the Kong or other chew for food if they brought it out as well, send them back into the crate and return the chew. If they keeps leaving, go back to the previous step (sitting near the crate rather than moving around the room) for another session. You can also ziptie your chew to the back of the crate so your dog can’t carry it outside!

Closing the door

Removing yourself from the room

Extending the time between bonus treats

Staying relaxed – even after finishing the Kong or bone

Fading the interval treats

Fading the chew

You’re ready: start using the crate in real life!


All parts of the crate training tutorial:

Part 1: https://adventuredogsanarchy.com/crate-expectations-part-1-shaping-interactions-with-a-new-crate/
Part 2: https://adventuredogsanarchy.com/crate-expectations-part-2-lying-down-in-the-crate-and-starting-to-build-duration/
Part 3: https://adventuredogsanarchy.com/crate-expectations-part-3-adding-a-cue-and-extending-duration/
Part 4: https://adventuredogsanarchy.com/crate-expectations-part-4-building-relaxation/

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