Tag Archives: Rescue Dog

Padfoot: First Steps

Have you ever looked at those lists of dog breeds, the ones that tell you the which breeds have the most of certain characteristics? It you look at lists for “most intelligent,” “most loyal,” and “most willful/independent/stubborn” you’ll see the same breeds. And most of those breeds ended up in Padfoot’s DNA. 

Please note: anything I say about dogs and dog training is my opinion, based of thirty years with street urchins I have loved. I don’t claim to be a master dog trainer. Anyway, in my experience, the more intelligent a dog is, the less “do it because I say so” will work once they reach adolescence. And the smarter a dog is, the more they are likely to rebel at dominance oriented training and the more you need to build respect. 

Think about every movie you’ve ever seen where the well-meaning do-gooder attempts to help the kid living on the streets. The kid doesn’t trust anyone but himself, lacks discipline, and has little appreciation for structure. If you want to address reactivity, jumpiness, mouthiness and pretty much anything else, it’s essential to get them to accept your leadership. Getting there requires baby steps. 

Core to teaching your dog to control their impulses are Sit, Down, and Stay. Use plenty of praise and treats in a quiet setting with no distractions. (Padfoot picked up Sit in about 5 seconds. Down requires submission and was much harder for him. Stay was impossible. I would tell him to “Stay,” and he thought it meant “Dance.” I gave up and started over with “Freeze,” and that works for us.)

Once they have mastered these commands and understand that good things happen when they listen to you, start using them in your daily routine. Ask them to Sit at the door before you open it, or when friends approach (getting in front of their impulse so they don’t jump). Tell them to Stay while you set their dinner down several feet away, and pick the bowl up if they move before you release them (don’t make them wait too long. 10 seconds is enough to get the point across). 

The more they want what is on the other side (getting to go outside, getting to eat, etc.) the more motivated they will be to listen to you. And the more they listen to you, the more they will listen to you when they encounter distractions or triggers. Progress is only ever by degrees. It’s often one step forward and two back, so mark and celebrate all the tiny wins.

I know this sounds very remedial, and it is. It’s also the path of least resistance to building trust, and it’s so easy to forget basics when you are dealing with the chaos an undisciplined dog creates.

I mentioned my arsenal of aversives earlier, and they are another important tool. I’ll talk more about them next month.

March 2025: Padfoot Update & Adventures in Crating

Here is my serious lad with a rare smile.

March 16th was the 6 month anniversary of Padfoot’s Gotcha Day. My boy is all sleek intensity. He thinks he’s the Secret Service and I am the President’s errant daughter. He has to go everywhere with me. I have to take him with me to get the mail. If he is in the car and I stop for coffee, he has to get out and do a perimeter check.

It’s. His. Job.

All of which makes it difficult to leave him at home.

Last month I promised to share my trials and errors with Padfoot. While everything happens all at once, I am breaking it down by topic. This month is crating. I work from home so Padfoot is rarely alone and then usually for about 90 minutes.

Things have changed since I adopted Beez in 1993. I gave him the run of the apartment and balcony when I went to work and came home to whatever devastation he’d created. I arrived home not long after I adopted him to find Beez—who desperately needed a walk after more than 8 hours—had chewed both of his leashes and I had no way to restrain him. I finally slipped an electrical cord through his collar to take him out.

I crated Gypsy when she was young, to protect the apartment from her devastation. I crate Padfoot to protect him from himself.

Now days we have nanny cams. I had a cheap Wyze camera for package delivery and I turned it around. Not only could I watch and hear Padfoot, I could also speak to him.

Padfoot hated his crate and would howl piteously, making this screech/squeeling noise like when your steering goes out, but louder and more obnoxious. I sang nonsense to him and it would calm him down. I’d check back in thirty minutes later and he’d be howling again.

Nothing helped. Not the YouTube videos of calming dog music, Not the enrichment treats, not his special crate-safe toys. One day I checked in and he’d bounced against the front panel and knocked it off its hooks and collapsed it. I found him wallowing in garbage strewn all over the kitchen.

She who does not like to be named said to secure the crate with zip ties and lock the door with carabiners. I followed her advice, using one carabiner halfway up and thinking it entirely unnecessary since the door closed with 3 pins that fit into loops and a latch.

An hour later I checked in. The crate was empty, Padfoot knocked the door loose and—skinny boy that he is—squeezed out the bottom corner. He wrestled the top off a 2 pound jar of Milkbone Minis and ate more than half, giving himself a tummy ache.

Friends agreed, Padfoot was too anxious for a crate. I want to stress, in all this time Padfoot loved to rip up garbage but he did not destroy anything that mattered. He did treat my glasses case like a chew toy, but that was it. He did not knock over my grandmother’s antique lamp, he did not eat my shoes. He did not tear up my bedding. He left my hundreds of accessible books alone. My one concern was that in his counter surfing and bouncing around he could hurt himself.

As for the crate, I figured if my Houdini could entertain himself breaking out, he could also entertain himself breaking in. I hooked the door shut with a bungee cord and started putting his meals inside.

I puppy proofed the apartment and saved small boxes to tower on the counters for his surfing enjoyment. I loaded his crate with all the fun things.

And I left.

Preparing to leave was labor intensive but it worked.

For a while.

Then I noticed that despite the awesome entertainment center I’d created for him, he he spent his time racing from the living room window to the kitchen window to the balcony, looking for me and winding himself up. When he launched himself off the recliner next to my living room window he sent it rocking so hard I was afraid it would break. I wound up zip-tying the mechanism.

It broke my heart.

The weather intervened. I’ve lived in the same apartment in a two-family for 35 years. I lost the key to my deadbolt sometime in the 90s. The winter temperatures warped the wood just enough that while I can push the door shut and turn the bolt from the inside, I can no longer get the door to latch when I pull it shut from the hall.

Meaning my boy could get out and risk engaging with the unfriendly dogs downstairs, which would be a disaster.

Run of the apartment was no longer an option. Then a small miracle happened. Padfoot went into his crate and laid down for no particular reason. Spending a few months with the crate containing all manner of goodies and having the freedom to come and go changed his perception of it.

We’ve been using the new crate protocol for about 8 weeks. So far, so good.

I’m sure you’re wondering what kinds of treats I load his crate with. I follow Cincinnati Animal CARE protocols. I figure since they handle as many as 300 dogs onsite at any time, their recommendations are trustworthy. I will share about enrichment next month.

UPDATE: We struck a compromise. Padfoot gets the run of the living room, with one window to look out, and can come and go from his crate as he pleases. As of this posting, he barks for a few minutes for form when I leave but quickly settles down, though he spends most of his time looking out the window for me. When I return home, he gets a quick walk and then he conks out. Hopefully he will progress to the point where he conks out while I am gone.