Cove Canine Services

Cove Canine Services Creating canine fulfillment and balance through training, enrichment, and connection.

Lead with intention, and your dog will follow—be the change you wish to see in them.

🐾🍁 Discover the joy of structured socialization, confidence building, and enrichment with our Pack Hikes! Dogs explore w...
10/20/2025

🐾🍁 Discover the joy of structured socialization, confidence building, and enrichment with our Pack Hikes! Dogs explore woodland trails for about 2 hours, practicing calm engagement and building trust within the pack.

For pups who need a little extra guidance before joining the group, our Pack Prep Program offers 4 one-hour, one-on-one sessions to set both dog and owner up for success, reinforcing the skills needed to thrive as a pack member.

Exciting, engaging, and enriching—let’s get your dog moving with the pack! We service Saratoga, Ballston Spa, and Malta. Message us today!

10/20/2025
🐾 Looking for a few adventure-ready pups!Cove Canine is opening limited spots for our Pack Hikes starting in November — ...
10/14/2025

🐾 Looking for a few adventure-ready pups!
Cove Canine is opening limited spots for our Pack Hikes starting in November — structured group hikes designed to build social neutrality, burn energy, and give dogs a real fulfillment outlet.

We pick your dog up, we head out on a controlled group hike (no chaotic dog park energy here!) work on calm social skills, engagement, recall and neutrality — and then your dog comes home tired, happy, and satisfied.

Perfect for dogs who:
➡️ Need more than a walk around the block
➡️ Benefit from structure and training reinforcement
➡️ Enjoy other dogs but don’t thrive in high-chaos settings

We service Saratoga, Ballston Spa, and Malta. If you want your dog to join the pack, send me a message!

10/07/2025

If You Think Crate Training Is Cruel, You’re Probably Doing Everything Else Wrong Too

Every few days someone tells me, “I’d never crate my dog , it’s cruel.” I understand where that comes from. Nobody wants to harm their dog. But here’s the truth that may sting a little:

Crates aren’t the problem. Your lack of structure is.

If you believe a crate is automatically mean, it usually signals a bigger misunderstanding about what dogs actually need to feel safe, calm, and connected.

A Crate Is Not a Cage — It’s a Bedroom for the Canine Brain

Humans see bars and think prison. Dogs don’t.

Dogs evolved from animals that slept in dens, enclosed, predictable spaces where they could fully let down their guard. The limbic system (the emotional brain) is wired to feel safe in a contained space when it’s introduced correctly. That safety lets the autonomic nervous system shift out of hyper-arousal and into rest.

When I say “kennel” or “crate” in my house, I mean bedroom. It’s the place my dogs retreat to when they want zero pressure from the world , to nap, chew a bone, or just exhale. My German Shepherds and Malinois will often choose their crates on their own when the house is buzzing with activity.

Why So Many Dogs Are Stressed Without Boundaries

Freedom sounds loving, but for many dogs it’s chaotic and overwhelming:
• Hypervigilance: They scan every sound and movement because no one has drawn a line between safe and unsafe.

• Over-arousal: Barking, pacing, and destructive chewing are the brain trying to find control in a world without limits.

• Problem behavior rehearsal: Every hour a dog practices bad habits (counter surfing, jumping, door dashing) is an hour those neural pathways strengthen.

From a neuroscience standpoint, the prefrontal cortex — the impulse-control center — is limited in dogs. They rely on our structure to regulate. A dog without clear boundaries burns out its stress response system, living in chronic low-grade cortisol spikes.

A structured dog isn’t “suppressed.” They’re relieved , free from the constant job of self-managing a complex human world.

Crates Give the Nervous System a Reset Button

Here’s the part most people miss: A properly introduced crate isn’t just a place to “put” a dog. It’s a tool for nervous system regulation.

• Sleep: Dogs need far more sleep than humans , around 17 hours a day. A crate gives them uninterrupted rest.

• Decompression: After training or high stimulation, the crate helps the brain down-shift from sympathetic (fight/flight) to parasympathetic (rest/digest).

• Reset: Just like humans may retreat to a quiet room to recharge, dogs use the crate to self-soothe and recalibrate.

But here’s the catch: PLACEMENT MATTERS!!! My crates in my bedroom are for Little Guy, Ryker and Walkiria, Garage is for Cronos, Guest Bedroom for Mieke and my bathroom is for Rogue and my Canace is in my Shed.

Stop Putting the Crate in the Middle of the Storm

Most people stick the crate in the living room because that’s where they hang out. But think about what that room is for your dog: constant TV noise, kids running, doorbells, guests coming and going, kitchen clatter.

That’s not decompression. That’s forced proximity to stimulation with no way to escape.

If you want the crate to become a true bedroom, give it its own space , a quiet corner of your house, a spare room, a low-traffic hallway, garage , shed. Somewhere your dog can fully turn off. The first time many of my clients move the crate out of the living room, they see their dog sigh, curl up, and sleep deeply for the first time in months.

Why Some Dogs “Hate” Their Crate

If your dog panics, it’s almost never the crate itself. It’s:
• Bad association: Only being crated when punished or when the owner leaves.
• No foundation: Tossed in without gradual acclimation or positive reinforcement.
• Total chaos elsewhere: If the whole day is overstimulating and unpredictable, the crate feels random and scary.

I’ve turned around countless “crate haters” by reshaping the experience: short sessions, feeding meals inside, rewarding calm entry, keeping tone neutral. In a few weeks, the same dogs trot inside happily and sleep peacefully.

Freedom Without Foundation Hurts Dogs

I’ve met hundreds of well-intentioned owners who avoided the crate to be “kinder” , and ended up with:
• Separation anxiety so severe the dog destroys walls or self-injures.
• Reactivity because the nervous system never learned to shut off.
• Dangerous ingestion of household items.
• A heartbreaking surrender because life with the dog became unmanageable.

I’ll say it plainly: a lack of structure is far crueler than a well-used crate.

When we don’t provide safe boundaries, we hand dogs a human world they’re ill-equipped to navigate alone.

How to Introduce a Crate the Right Way
1. Think bedroom, not jail. Feed meals in the crate, offer a safe chew, and keep the vibe calm and neutral.

2. Give it a quiet location. Not the busiest room. Dogs need true off-duty time.

3. Pair exercise + training first. A fulfilled brain settles better. Every Dog at my place get worked at east 4-5 times per day (yes this is why I am always tired)

4. Short, positive sessions. Build up time slowly; don’t lock and leave for hours right away. (I work my dogs mentally for max 15 minutes, puppies shorter, physical activity and play around 20 minutes, when I take dogs for a workout walk around 1 hour walk )

5. Never use it as AVERSIVE punishment when conditioning. The crate should predict calm, safety, and rest. When you are advanced eventually we can use the crate as "time out" to reset the brain after proper conditioning has taken place.

6. Create a rhythm: Exercise → training → calm crate nap. Predictability equals security. ( I have 10 dogs on my property right now so every dog works about 15 minutes x 10 dogs = 150 minutes = 2 1/2 hours. Every dogs get worked every 2 1/5 hours, I do that minimum 4 times per day = 600 minutes or 10 hours. yes this is why I wake up so early and go to bed late lol )

The Science of Calm: What’s Happening in the Brain

When a dog settles in a safe, quiet crate:
• The amygdala (fear center) reduces activity.
• The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis down-regulates, lowering cortisol.
• The parasympathetic nervous system engages: heart rate slows, breathing steadies.
• Brain waves shift from high-alert beta to calmer alpha/theta — the same pattern seen in deep rest.

This is why dogs who have a true den space often become more relaxed and stable everywhere else in life.

The Bottom Line

If you think crates are cruel, you’re missing the bigger picture. The crate isn’t about punishment — it’s about clarity, safety, and mental health.

A dog without structure lives in a constant state of uncertainty: Where should I rest? What’s safe? Why am I always on guard? That life is stressful and, over time, damaging.

A well-introduced crate says: Here is your safe space. Here’s where you rest and reset. The world makes sense.

Kindness isn’t endless freedom. Kindness is clarity. And sometimes clarity looks like a cozy, quiet bedroom with a door that means you can relax now.

Bart De Gols

Teaching your dog to “come” when called isn’t just a fun trick. It’s one of the most important skills they can learn.A s...
04/19/2025

Teaching your dog to “come” when called isn’t just a fun trick. It’s one of the most important skills they can learn.

A strong recall means:
➡️ You can call your dog away from danger (traffic, aggressive dogs, wildlife)
➡️ They can enjoy more off-leash freedom safely.
➡️ You have better control in unpredictable situations, like running into a porcupine!

[email protected] | 518-288-7923

If we want to create lasting change in our dogs, it begins with us.Our dogs are always picking up on the way we interact...
04/14/2025

If we want to create lasting change in our dogs, it begins with us.

Our dogs are always picking up on the way we interact with them—how we live together, what we reinforce, and how we communicate. Want a calmer dog? Start by leading with calmness. Want better listening? Work on giving clear, consistent cues. Want mutual respect? Stick to your boundaries every time.

Training goes beyond the sessions—it’s about the way we show up for our dogs in everyday life.

[email protected] | 518-288-7923

Say hello to Summit!This smart Border Collie has been working hard with us on his obedience, manners, and reactivity—and...
04/13/2025

Say hello to Summit!

This smart Border Collie has been working hard with us on his obedience, manners, and reactivity—and he’s made incredible progress. Like many herding breeds, Summit can be a handful, but thanks to the strong foundation his owners laid, we were able to help him level up his skills even more.

Way to go, Summit—you crushed it!

[email protected] | 518-288-7923

Address

Albany, NY

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Cove Canine Services posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category