Careers at the Calgary Humane Society

Overview

Cats
Adopting a Cat
Cat Body Language
Cat Housesoiling Checklist
Cat Run Instructions
Cat Toys and How To Use Them
Cat Types
Controlling Undesirable Behaviours in Cats
Destructive Scratching
Detering Cats From Specific Areas
Developmental Stages of Kitten Behaviour
Excessive Nocturnal Activity In Cats
Exercise For Cats
Feline Aggression Types and Suggestions
Feline Marking Behaviours
Feline Redirected Aggression
Introducing Your New Cat to Your Other Pets
Managing Your Kitten's Rough Play
Play Aggression In Cats
Play With Your Cat
Preventing Litter Box Issues
Solving Litter Box Problems
The Inside Story
Your Cat: Indoors or Out?
Your Talkative Cat

Dogs
Aggressive Behaviour, Part 1
Aggressive Behaviour, Part 2
And Baby Makes Four...
Barking
Calming Signals
Children and Dogs
Cognitive Dysfunction
Controlling Jumping
Controlling Pulling and Lunging
Crate Games
Crate Training Your Dog
Deaf Dog Training
Destructive Chewing
Developmental Stages of Puppy Behaviour
Digging Dogs
Dog Interactions
Dog Toys and How to Use Them
Dog Training Classes
Dog Training Equipment
Excitable and Disobedient Dogs
Exercise For Dogs
Fearful or Shy Dogs
Food Bowl Exercises
Head Collars
Housetraining Your Adult Dog
How To Handle a Dog Fight
Inside or Out?
Introducing Your New Dog to Your Resident Dog
Kong Recipes and Information
Leash Induced Aggression
Microwaved Beef Liver Training Treats
Muzzles
Nothing In Life Is Free
Puppy Nipping and Rough Play
Relationship Building
Separation Anxiety
Step In Harness and Double Ended Leash
Submissive and Excitement Urination
The Best Dog For You
Training Tether
Understanding Dog Aggression

General
Bibliography
Fears, Phobias and Anxieties
Foods to Avoid Feeding Your Pet
Helpful Websites and Calgary Contacts
Plants That Are Dangerous To Your Pet
Preparing Your Pet for Baby's Arrival
Successful Cleaning to Remove Pet Odors and Stains
Unusual Eating Habits in Dogs and Cats


Destructiveness – Digging

Why do dogs dig?
Digging behaviour in dogs can have many motivations. Some breeds, such as the Northern breeds (huskies, malamutes) dig cooling holes and lie in them. On a very hot summer day any dog may dig a hole to cool off. Breeds like terriers have been bred to flush out prey or dig for rodents. With their ability to hear high frequency sounds, and their highly acute sense of smell, some dogs dig as a direct result of odors or sounds such as voles and moles that attract the pet from beneath the ground. Pregnant bitches dig when nesting. Dogs dig to bury or retrieve bones. Dogs also dig to escape from confinement. Digging may also be an activity similar to destructive chewing that occurs when pets are left alone with insufficient stimulation or attention. This is particularly so in puppies and in highly energetic dogs.

How can I determine why my dog is digging?
The first step in treating inappropriate digging behaviour is to determine the reason for digging. Prevention, remote punishment, and booby traps may also be needed, but reducing your dog's motivation to dig, and providing for all of its needs are essential so that digging is not merely redirected to a new location. Inhibiting or preventing all digging, without understanding and dealing with the dog's motivation could result in new behaviour problems such as chewing, excessive vocalization, or escape behaviours.

Dogs that dig because they are pursuing prey will continue unless you can get rid of the prey. Dogs that dig in an attempt to get cool should be provided with a cool resting area with plenty of shade and water. On very hot days, it may be best to keep your dog inside. For some dogs, digging may be an indication of not enough exercise and owner attention. Additional play and exercise times may be needed to keep digging behaviours under control, especially if your dog is young and very active. Dogs that continue to dig may require additional stimulation to keep them occupied when the owners are not around (see our handout on Destructiveness - Chewing). If your dog is outside all day and digging is taking place, you do need to ask yourself if keeping the dog inside may be a better answer. This is particularly true for the dog that digs to escape from the yard or confinement area. If you are unable to keep the dog inside because of house soiling or destruction, then you may need to address those problems first.

How can I stop inappropriate digging?

Provide a digging area
For some dogs it may be useful for you to create an area where the dog is allowed to dig. This could be a spot in the backyard where you have placed soft dirt and perhaps railroad ties around the area to delineate the location. Next, make this place somewhere that your dog would like to dig in. Bury things there that your pet would like to dig up. This might be food, lightly covered. Then put things deeper into the ground. If you do that (naturally when your dog is not watching!) at irregular intervals, your dog should be more likely to dig there, than other locations in your yard. Another option is to allow the dog to dig in a spot where it has already chosen, and to prevent digging in other locations by supervision, confinement (prevention), or booby-traps.

Supervision and punishment
Supervision and direct intervention (shaker can, verbal reprimand, water gun) can be used to prevent inappropriate digging in the owner's presence but the behaviour will likely continue in the owner’s absence. Remote punishment (turning on a sprinkler, pulling on an extended leash), booby traps (placing chicken wire, rocks or water in the area where the pet digs), or covering the surface with one that is impervious (asphalt/patio stones) might teach the pet to avoid the digging site even in the owner's absence. These techniques do not however prevent the pet from digging in other locations.

What else can be done if inappropriate digging continues when I am not around to supervise?
When you are unavailable to supervise your dog, housing the dog indoors is the most practical solution until he or she has learned to stay outdoors without digging. If you would like to continue to leave him/her outdoors, it is best to confine the dog to an area such as a pen or run, so that it has no access to the digging areas. The run should be inescapable, and could be covered with gravel, patio tiles or have an asphalt or concrete floor so that the dog cannot escape or do damage. Of course it will be necessary to provide sufficient exercise and stimulation before confining the dog and an adequate number of treats and play toys in the run to keep the dog occupied. Another alternative is to provide an area within the pen or run where digging is allowed.