I have a Groenendael (Belgian Shepherd) who is 5 yrs old and very sensitive to thunder, lightning & similar disturbances such as appallingly wasteful firework displays.
When these occur, he will squeeze himself into the smallest out of the way nook he can find. [He always has the run of the house so can go wherever he wishes.]
I do the best I can to calm him but can't seem to get through when he's in that 'terror' state. So, please excuse my delay but just wanted to set the scene -
I'd like to build a dog-house / cubby for inside the house. (He already has a bed in each of 4 rooms but when the storms come he doesn't use them as he wants to hide)
My needs are:
* Economy (I'm a low income pensioner)
* Simplicity
* Base of the floor - possibly even use a dog bed with vertical non-splaying legs.
* Light weight (so that I can move it around if necessary)
* Easy to clean (He has a long coat and sheds lots)
* Big enough for him to get in and out easily but compact so that he feels safer
* Size needed will probably be approximately 80-90 cm long, 40 - 50 cm wide, 60 - 75 cm high
My own thoughts were possibly:
*A plastic tubing, wire or wooden frame
* If wire was used, bending it to provide several inverted U shaped supports on which I could drape a cover
* If wood is used, perhaps a pine frame with plywood (?) sides and top for lightness & a removable base or build so that frame fits around a dog bed
* If plastic tubing is used, it will depend on whether it is stiff or flexible and how it connects. I have seen advertisements for garden frames that use plastic tubes and thought that may be a solution and good for lightness and ease of cleaning but I'm not sure of costs & suitability of available sizes and connectors and such.
I'd appreciate any suggestions at all. I'm aware that medication is available for this sort of fear but I'd rather not have to go that way if I can avoid it. I do have some natural calming tablets that I can use if I'm aware of the storm's likelihood before he is and can give them before he's upset. The problem is that he seems to know when a storm is coming even hours before it arrives.
Anyway, thank you for reading this and if you have any suggestions, no matter how left field, I'd appreciate reading them.
Thank you, in anticipation,
roger