Michelle King, of Reseda, California, thought Crystal, her 6-month-old Golden Retriever, looked so cute snuggled into the pillows on her son's bed.
“She was asleep, so I left her alone and took a shower,” Michelle remembers. “When I came back to the bedroom, there was stuffing scattered everywhere.
Crystal had chewed up the bedding and even had a piece of fabric hanging from ear to ear.
A friend suggested that Michelle try putting her puppy into a crate when she couldn't keep an eye on her.
“I resisted because I didn't want to confine Crystal, and I didn't think that she would cause any more damage.
But I was wrong,” she says. “When my pup chomped off chunks of mattress one evening soon after, I bought a crate that same day.
I wasn't thrilled about using it, but Crystal's crime sprees were becoming too expensive.”
At first glance, putting your puppy into the small, confined space of a crate may seem cruel, but it's actually one of the kindest things you can do for your dog.
Marcus Thompson, a German Shepherd trainer and breeder from Vermont, makes the following connection between dogs and their wolf ancestors: