
Hi gemma81 :)
>her crying probably was because of being scared etc but all of the training and books i read suggested to do what i did so
As with the majority of members I exchange posts with, I have little or no idea how much ACTUAL experience you have in raising puppies so can only make a guesstimate based on the content of your posts - my apologies if I've misinterpreted your level of experience but the above phrase
(a) admits you accept the puppy was crying through being scared and
(b) advises (or appears to) that this method was decided by you on the basis of books, rather than having trained many puppies over many years :)
There are far more experienced dog folks on this forum than I am however I can confidently assure you that my advice is based on experience of having trained, successfully and without distress, 6 puppies of my own and a further 7 bred by me and all over an almost 20 year period where I've seen many fads, fashions, opinions splashed about as "the best way" only to be tweaked, revamped or turned on their heads on countless occasions :)
Books are written by varied individuals with equally varied experience and opinions on best practice - Not ONE, as far as I am concerned, is a definitive bible to be religiously followed in order to achieve the holy grail of puppy perfection ;) Even some which are extremely useful and informative often contain some bizarre old wive's tales relating to animal husbandry that quite simply shock most experienced owners and breeders - just as recipe books have come and gone in fashion over many decades so too have dog books. In short, don't believe all that you read simply because it found its way to a bookshelf - after all many writers on animal care relating to dozens of species actually pay for these books to be published themselves LOL and several find little interest for them!
> if i would have kept going to her everytime she cried there would have been no point crate training her!
the point of crate training a puppy is not IME or opinion anything to do with preventing a puppy from being
distressed but of ensuring a safe environent for a puppy to protect it from injuring itself by chewing inappropriate items (particularly electrical cables for eg) for SAFETY purposes when not directly supervised :) Puppies have for centuries been successfully and kindly trained to cope with leaving their dam and siblings before crates were ever invented - it's just a tool to help towards making the transition easier and should not be mistaken for a tool to "put up and shut up" a new family addition when at its most vulnerable and insecure!
>the maximum she ever cried was20-30 mins and that was after she had just been to the toilet so i knew she didnt need that!
so that could quite easily be read as you knowingly leaving her to be distressed and relying on her tiring herself out to prevent the possibility of your sleep being disturbed ....
>i knew i didnt want her to sleep on my bed for the next 15 years
FYI, attending to a puppies most fundamental emotional and physical needs in it's early days within a totally alien environment does not go hand in hand with adopting it as your sleeping partner for the rest of its natural life :) That's when appropriate, patient and kind training comes in!
>I was only advising the poster to what i did which has been incredibly successful
But based on how many puppies, over how many different approaches to make comparisons with? And who is to say had you employed a more sympathetic method to the puppy you would not have found "incredible success" with that also?
regards, Teri