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You are here: Home / Archives for my dog is bored

Is Your Dog Bored?

May 26, 2017 by Fanna Easter

Bored Dog: Symptoms and Solutions

Signs of a Bored Dog
Patryk Kosmider/Adobe Stock

Most dogs are bored, especially if they’re left home alone while their pet owners work all day. For the most part, dog boredom behavior resembles excessive behaviors because bored dogs are trying to expel excess energy.

Being bored is not a good thing for dogs, and most don’t appreciate it like humans. Think of a bored child; that’s how a bored dog feels. If your dog displays these bored dog behaviors, check out the following boredom busting solutions!

Signs of a Bored Dog

1. Excessive Barking

Easily, excessive barking is the most common behavior of bored dogs. Most pet owners assume dogs bark to protect their property, but that’s not exactly true. Bored dogs look for something to do, and barking is an easy outlet.

Excessive barking can happen anywhere, but it most commonly happens when dogs are left alone in backyards or inside their homes. Bored dogs will bark at anything—even at noises a half-mile away or falling leaves (this is quite common). Dogs left indoors usually sit on windowsills barking at anything and everything that passes by.

Many pet owners assume barking is a good thing; it gives their dogs something to do and keeps intruders out. But excessive barking teaches dogs to bark to make things go away. As a self-enforcing behavior, barking provides some type of satisfaction to a dog. Think about it this way: When a dog barks, it makes a squirrel run away, mail deliverer leave or jogger disappear.

Barking is a slippery slope, and it can become a habit rather quickly. Your dog will eventually learn to bark aggressively to make something scary go away, such as house guests or the veterinary staff, which isn’t a good thing.

2. Destructive Behavior

When dogs are bored, they’re looking for something to do. Your drapes, pillows, bedding, toilet paper, kitchen counters and trash cans are all fair game. So often, pet owners return home to a living room filled with pillow stuffing and an exhausted dog snoozing right next to it. If this happens, just pick up the pillow stuffing and vow to provide boredom busters to your dog daily.

Never get angry. It’s just confusing to your dog, and remember dogs do not feel guilt. Rather, dogs are freaked out by your angry behavior. Channel your dog’s pillow popping energy toward something else. 🙂

RELATED: Is Your Dog Confused?

Boredom Busters for Dogs

Daily physical exercise and mental enrichment are key boredom busters for dogs. Mental enrichment is just as important as physical exercise, so choose three boredom busters from the list below and provide daily. For maximum benefits, rotate between each boredom buster to keep your dog busy while you’re away.

10 Boredom Busters

  1. Feed all meals inside of a Kong (freeze to last longer). Toss food stuffed toys as you leave for work.
  2. Fill puzzle toys with high value treats.
  3. Walk your dog for 30 minutes. Hire a pet sitter if needed.
  4. Play fetch.
  5. Practice dog training skills (e.g. touch, down, sit, loose leash walking, come when called, etc.) once you return home from work.
  6. Grab a few boxes and toss treats inside one. Nose games are exhausting and fun and a great way for dogs to find their dinner.
  7. Once home, play tug for 20 minutes.
  8. Have fun with a flirt pole. A flirt pole mimics a running squirrel. This is a great activity for late afternoons.
  9. Before leaving for work, toss a handful of high value treats in the yard (or high pile rug). Your dog will have to hunt for each kibble.
  10. Take your dog on a car ride.

Give your dog something to do, so he doesn’t find his own boredom busters!

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Leaving Your Dog Home Alone? Try These Tips

July 13, 2016 by Fanna Easter

3 Ways to Keep Home Alone Dogs Entertained

Home Alone Dogs
adogslifephoto/iStock

As pet owners, we feel guilty when we leave our dogs home alone all day. Whenever I leave for work and I’m shutting the door behind me, my heart sinks to the floor because I hope my home alone dogs won’t be bored. Just to make sure they’re entertained while I’m away, I leave food stuffed toys and puzzles behind for them. I also enlist help from a pet sitter when my dogs are left alone for more than 4 hours. Check out these three tips that will keep your home alone dog busy while you’re away!

Provide Food Stuffed Toys

Food stuffed toys are a miracle; I can’t say this enough. I purchased rubber Kong toys online several years ago and ever since I’ve been filling them with food and storing them in the freezer every week. Before leaving for work, I toss a frozen food stuffed Kong in each dog’s crate. A frozen food stuffed dog toy will keep my home alone dogs busy for at least an hour. These durable rubber toys are pretty safe to leave with them unattended. Over time, my dogs have learned it’s a good thing when I leave for work because it means a frozen interactive toy.

When purchasing Kong toys, choose a black Extreme Kong for powerful chewers or a Classic Red Kong for normal chewers. As for size, check out Kong’s size recommendations, which lists sizes based on your dog’s breed and weight. When in doubt, choose one size larger, especially for powerful chewers.

Use a Kibble Dispensing Toy

This is another amazing dog toy and a must-have if your dog eats kibble (dry dog food). Your dog will need plenty of space when playing with a kibble dispensing toy because she needs to move the toy around to dispense food.

It’s always best to teach your dog how to use a kibble dispensing toy first before leaving her home alone with it. To do this, pour her evening meals inside the toy and encourage her as she bops it around. Once she confidently and happily pushes the toy around with her paws or nose, and hasn’t tried to chew it, you can leave your dog home alone with it. Pour your dog’s breakfast inside a kibble dispensing toy and place it on the ground before leaving for work.

I’ve had excellent results with Kong’s Wobbler (small or large) and Buster Cube kibble dispensing toys. These toys aren’t indestructible though. We’ve had to replace them several times due to gashes and cracks caused by my dogs tossing the toys across hard tile.

My dogs are very tough on toys, so a Wobbler will last about a year with everyday use and a Buster Cube will last a couple of years (this toy is super strong). Several of my clients swear their dogs absolutely love their Tug-A-Jug toy. With this toy, a dog must tug on the rope to dispense treats from inside the “jug.” It’s quite a challenging toy. We don’t use Tug-A-Jug toys in our home anymore because my dogs bashed a huge hole in our wall from slinging the toy in mid air and chewing the rope to pieces.

You may also be interested in: Indestructible Dog Toys (Well, Almost)

Hire a Mid Day Pet Sitter

If you’re gone for more than 4-6 hours at a time, I highly recommend paying a professional pet sitter to visit and potty your dogs mid day. During a typical visit, pet sitters will spend at least 30 minutes playing, walking and pottying your dog while you’re away. Honestly, I think asking a dog to hold it for longer than 4 hours is asking a lot. Your home alone dog needs to get out and stretch her legs, and of course potty. Plus, your pet sitter can refill your dog’s kibble dispensing toy or toss another frozen Kong in her crate for even more fun. I think all of that is easily worth $15-$20 per visit.

A Few Cautions for Your Home Alone Dogs

Never leave two or more home alone dogs with food stuffed toys because even the sweetest dogs will fight over food. If you choose to give two dogs food stuffed toys, you should toss them in your dogs’ crates, and then close and lock the crate doors. If you’re leaving two or more dogs home alone with kibble dispensing toys, which require room to make the toy work, then I recommend keeping each dog in a separate room with closed doors.  For dogs left loose in your home, you should separate them with super sturdy safety gates.

Lastly, please don’t leave dogs alone in your backyard because it’s not safe. Your neighbors could complain, your dogs could be stolen or your dogs could learn to escape your yard. It’s not worth it, so keep your dogs indoors when they’re home alone.

Filed Under: Games, Resources Tagged With: activities for dogs alone at home, bored puppy, dog alone home, dog alone while at work, keeping dogs home alone, leaving dog home alone, my dog is bored, tips for bored dogs, toys for dogs left alone

Indoor Games for Dogs

October 3, 2014 by Fanna Easter

The Perfect Dog Chew

Best Dog Chew
I love bully sticks!

It’s raining buckets outside and your excited puppy is bored. What should you do? Provide him with the perfect dog chew, which provides hours of indoor fun during a rainy day — it’s the ultimate game for dogs! 🙂

With all the interactive food puzzles on the market, we’ve forgotten one of the basic games: a good long-lasting dog chew. Don’t be fooled. It takes lots of energy, concentration and exercise to chew on something for hours. Plus, dogs crave chewing, especially puppies — it’s a natural behavior. Also, giving your dog a chew teaches him to happily remain in one spot, which most puppies and adolescent dogs need to learn.

Perfect Dog Chew Size

It’s vital to find the perfect chew size for your dog or puppy. As a general rule, if a chew fits in a dog’s mouth, meaning when he closes his mouth,  you can’t see it. It’s too small. When in doubt, choose a larger size. There’s nothing worse when a dog swallows the entire chew toy — yikes!

My Favorite Dog Chews

There are a bunch out there and my dogs have tried them all. When I worked as a vet tech, I assisted in many surgeries to remove large knots of rawhide stuck in the intestinal tract. We called it the zipper surgery (that was scary stuff).


 I have three requirements for dog chews:  

Easy to digest, will not break into large pieces (will not get caught in the intestinal tract), and dogs must love them.


Before I tell you my fav dog chew, you must understand, my dogs are power chewers. This means they are furry termites and could chew through dry wall if allowed. 🙂

Fanna’s Favorite Chew: Bully Sticks

Yes, those stinky bully sticks are my fav chews for dogs! My dogs love them. They pass through the stomach and intestinal tract with minimal issues (maybe a bit of gas here and there), usually will not cause diarrhea and the stick remains intact even with power chewers. While many rawhides are compressed in stick form, large chunks can be chewed off and swallowed. A bully stick is whole, meaning it’s not compressed and nature made it this way. If you want to know what bully sticks are made of, then Google “What are bully sticks made of?” I won’t discuss that here, as we’re a G-rated blog!

I know there are vegetable-based chews out there, which work the same way as bully sticks. You’re more than welcome to try them. My dogs don’t love them so we stick to bully sticks. 🙂

Don’t forget to always supervise your dog when he’s chewing any type of chew.

In this video, I explain what chew supervision looks like:

I want to hear from you! What’s your dog’s favorite chew toy or indoor game for dogs?

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Dog Training Nation is a dog training blog for pet owners and dog lovers. We cover a range of topics from puppy socialization tips to dog aggression to dog health. It is our hope you share our content to make the world a better place for dogs.

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