Discourage Your Dog From Garden Digging

If your dog likes to dig, you know that it can be a hard habit to break. It
is, in fact, instinctual. Not only is garden digging extremely annoying,
but also it can endanger your dog’s health.

Why is my dog attracted to my garden?
If you think about it, gardens are wonderful dog playgrounds. There’s lots
of fun stuff there:

Smells: Manure is often used as fertilizer. Plantings often smell good and
this may encourage your dog to dig around.

Playthings: Moles, mice and other fun things often live in a garden or stop
by for a visit. And plants are fun to pull out of the ground.

How to stop digging

If you do some work in the garden, roll out the hose and fit a sprinkler on
the end. When the dog goes to investigate the area, turn on the sprinkler.
In this way the sprinkler is telling the dog off, and not you. The added
bonus of letting the sprinkler do the work for you is that many dogs will
learn not to dig whilst you are present but can dig away happily when you
are away from home. The sprinkler causes the dog to think that the actual
garden is chastising him and does not realise that you were involved at the
tap end!

What if you do not have a sprinkler, or the dog is digging at a point too
far away for the hoses to reach? Treat yourself to a toy water pistol. For
very little cost, you can buy a water pistol that has a good accuracy over
several meters. Then you just hang around in the garden and wait for the
dog to start digging. As soon as this happens, deliver a jet of water at
the dog, aiming for its head. Say nothing; act as if you were not involved.
This can have a similar effect to turning on the sprinkler.

If your dog seems hyperactive, chews destructively and digs holes then this
could be boredom. Take the dog out away from the garden for exercise for at
least one hour each day. Play games of fetch with a ball and do not
restrict the dog to the garden – allow him into the house. The more the dog
is alone the more likely it is to dig. Leaving toys stuffed with food and
goodies when he is left alone will make the “home alone” times more
stimulating.

Dogs that dig at fences may well be bored and trying to get out to
something on the other side of the fence. The scent hounds will especially
do this when they can smell something really interesting on the other side
of the fence – so watch out if you have a Beagle. If there are any gaps in
your fencing fill them in but also watch for gaps below the fence – fill
this in with concrete or attach chicken wire to the bottom of the fence and
curve onto the ground, burying it below the surface. For dogs that do keep
going back to the same hole to dig, try lifting some of the dog’s own poo
and placing that in the hole – few dogs will dig through their own feces.

If you find that despite all your attempts to stop it your dog keeps on
digging, then you might consider ceding a portion of the garden. If your
toddler likes to dig, we buy them a sandpit. The same can apply to the dog.
Provide a sandbox – or just a small corner of bare, dug over earth, and
bury bones and favourite toys. At first, leave part of the toy sticking out
of the ground, take the dog over to the area, and act excited as if you are
about to discover lost treasure. Let the dog dig to get the toy and praise
like mad.

Whenever you then see the dog digging in other parts of the garden, switch
into your “excited – buried treasure” routine and encourage the dog over to
the digging area. Better to have one small area dug up by the dog than to
have your whole garden looking like a minefield.

If you feel your dog is digging because he is bored and you decide to
obtain another dog to keep him company, then expect to have two digging
machines! Far better to solve the first dog’s digging problem before
multiplying this by two.


Article extracted from David the Dogman’s A-Z Guide to Dogs available all
bookshops ( ISBN 84-89954-08-9 ) or can be ordered on
http://www.thedogman.net

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