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Dog destroying bin
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Everytime we go out, Alfie destroys the bin and distributes the contents all over the house. Obviously we need to remember to lock it away but oftentimes we are in such a rush to get to work that we forget.
I don't want to start shutting the internal doors, thereby confining him to any little part of the house.
My question is why does he keep doing it when he knows he is going to get told off? (he is often hiding when we get back).
Is he just greedy and foraging for food or is he rebelling?
I don't want to start shutting the internal doors, thereby confining him to any little part of the house.
My question is why does he keep doing it when he knows he is going to get told off? (he is often hiding when we get back).
Is he just greedy and foraging for food or is he rebelling?
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No best answer has yet been selected by NoMercy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You say he's rescued from Spain. Rescue dogs nearly always come with problems. My own dog is a rescue from the RSPCA and suffers from separation anxiety whenever I'm not there, this has manifested itself in him emptying the bin, which I now always move so he can't reach it. Alfie doesn't know he's done wrong, he hides away from you when you come home because he associates you coming home with being told off!
we have a beagle and she will eat anything whether its edible or not , have had labs and never had a bin while we had them it wasnt worth the hassle couldnt leave anything on the worktops either as he would jump up and pinch whatever was on them a shredded tea towel makes a lovely mess as well , now have the bin inside the cupboad but never put any food in it , just get rid of the bin mercy it will save you no end of stress
Hey Nox, I used to say things like 'bloody thing' about my dog too, because she could be an old scrote when she wanted to be ... then two weeks ago she chased a cat and before I could stop her she was under the wheels of a lorry. She wagged her tail twice and died in my husband's arms as he sobbed over her and now we have the biggest 'dog shaped' empty hole in our house and in our lives. Someone is giving us a new dog today, whom they can't cope with anymore because they have two small children, and I'm going to find it impossible to tell him off for anything I think. I didn't know it could be sooooo painful!
Julia - so sad for you, but glad you have a new foster-dog ♥
NoM - it's nothing to do with being hungry. My catz had tea last night, then begged for more food at 930 - then I came down this morning to a dead mouse and the remains of a pigeon (ever woken up to a feather carpet?). It's the "here's food, let's find it" syndrome, whether they are hungry or not.
NoM - it's nothing to do with being hungry. My catz had tea last night, then begged for more food at 930 - then I came down this morning to a dead mouse and the remains of a pigeon (ever woken up to a feather carpet?). It's the "here's food, let's find it" syndrome, whether they are hungry or not.
NoMercy, our dog is Ok with being left for a reasonable lentgh of time, but if we are out for more than 2 hours we give her a treat ball / toy. Keeps her amused.She tends to shake a toy in objection as we leave the house but that is the only objection she seems to show.
Another dog we had years ago, was destructive, we used to leave a small waste bin with scrunched up paper and one or two favorite balls/sqeakies hidden in it. You still have some mess but they concentrate on the contents of the bin.
Another dog we had years ago, was destructive, we used to leave a small waste bin with scrunched up paper and one or two favorite balls/sqeakies hidden in it. You still have some mess but they concentrate on the contents of the bin.
I think he's rebelling. A few years a go we had relations staying with us and one day we all, including our dog, went to the seaside. The four youngsters bought polystyrene surfboards and on returning home left them in the kitchen while we went out for a meal, minus the dog this time. We returned to a very large pile of polystyrene chips and he certainly wasn't repentant, looked quite pleased with his evenings work.
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