
Friday, October 04, 2024
A considerable problem is solved: my puppy Chase won’t again escape a new “inescapable kennel” where he will stay when I must leave home. His driving instinct to follow me triggers escaping skills, which he specializes in.
Thanks to a bit of luck, and special thanks to my kind neighbors, Frank and Annette. They have sometimes rescued Chase, brought him home, and re-locked him into my big, sturdy kennel. (For many years, that structure was inescapable by dogs, but recently, Chase–super athletic and too-smart–managed to escape.)
The solution was a happenstance. Down by the barn near my chicken coop stood a wire structure where I occasionally isolated hens needing special attention. That structure has been unused for many months. It’s fully enclosed with wire, with a human-size walk-through wire door, and roofed completely by heavy wire. It looked perfect for safely and securely enclosing Chase but needed to be dismantled, relocated, and reset onto a concrete base.
That structure is large enough to accommodate a dog’s movement and would fit inside my larger standalone structure, which Chase escapes now.
My kind neighbors donated their time and turned the possibilities into a reality. Frank and Annette dismantled the structure, loaded its sections into their pickup, and moved everything uphill. They reassembled the new dog kennel inside the big standalone. We all viewed the result as inescapable.
The new kennel is set securely on a concrete base. Heavy stall mats laid over the concrete increase residents’ comfort. Finally, Chase will be secured; he’ll be in an inescapable smaller kennel within a safe and larger enclosure.
Dear Friends: I cannot begin to adequately describe my enormous relief. Diana
Frank and Annette sound like super neighbors which both of us are grateful for!🤗Sent from my iPhone
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Hi Julie, and thanks for your caring comment. My neighbors are wonderful, kind, and I am thankful for them–lucky they’re nearby. Saying, too, for Chase, who several times they’ve corralled, before he could drift onto the nearby roadway and get hurt. (He will be in his new enclosure today–fingers crossed.)
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