Dog Cages Simplify House Training
Getting a new puppy can be exciting for the whole family. You can’t wait to get the puppy to its new home so it can play and become familiar with its new owners. But wait! There’s one thing you forgot about – house training! Training your puppy to “go” outside is no picnic, but it is much easier with the use of dog cages.
Puppy Space
Dog cages or dog crates enable you to provide a bed and small “home within your home” for the puppy. The cage will be the puppy’s own space, sort of like a dog house when outdoors. A crate can serve several purposes. It gives the dog a safe, secure place to sleep. A cage makes training a lot easier because dogs usually won’t go to the bathroom where they eat and sleep. It also keeps your dog in a contained area so he doesn’t roam the house freely. He won’t be chewing wires and furniture, pottying or doing whatever else when you’re not looking.
So if the dog cage is used as the puppy’s special bedding area from the beginning, it won’t take long to train him to go outside. He’ll learn to hold it until time to go out in order to resist going where he sleeps and/or eats.
Features to Consider
When browsing various stores for puppy cages, there are some features to look for before buying. You can check online and view photos, features, puppy crate sizes, etc. to get an idea of what’s available. Look for those with electro coating or other safe wire coating to prevent chewing. Make sure the cage doesn’t have sharp, welded edges that can cut the dog or one of the owners. Look for warranties, corrosion protection, and other pet safety features.
Most high quality wire cages feature a durable plastic tray in the bottom that can easily be removed for cleaning. You can place bedding (a dog bed or mattress) on top of the tray. Easy folding features are a plus as well. Look for dog cages that fold easily into a flat, secure position for traveling. Some even have a convenient carrying handle. Another thing to look for is a safety door latch that your dog won’t be able to push loose. A reliable door latch will use spring action to pull the latch and secure it into the slot.
Check out online dog supply stores for dog cages and crates, car cages, dog training collars, dog leads and more. Be sure to compare crate sizes to get the right fit for your dog. If the cage is too big, some do feature a divider so you can enlarge the cage space as your puppy grows. You might be able to get better quality at lower prices by shopping online. Dog cages can be life savers for new puppies as well as older dogs!

Puppy shots are essential for ensuring the proper growth and development of your puppy. Most puppies receive their first round of shots between their first five to eight weeks of life. This is the time that the maternal antibodies in their bodies begin to wear off. Puppy 
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not sure what your point is…what you say is true about oil storage tanks…the result of that was bettering the design codes of storage tanks, (added corrosion protection etc). Fracking natural gas formations is a different deal.
I believe, there is one particular news factor the media tends to use more over others. This factor would be the Human interest factor. If the story isn't interesting then the readers will more than likely not look foward to reading further more into the topic. Therefore, I believe that Human-interest stories is one particular news factor the media tends to use over others for the interest of readers getting to know other people and how they behave, to feel emotion and to have an opportunity to relate to their experiences.
Bad report. Mayes Testing was the company responsible for inspection of the post tension cables.
Asm Handbook: Corrosion : Fundamentals, Testing, and Protection:
This time they were able to discover the identities of unknown soldiers through DNA testing, so there is a substantial novelty factor to warm up the rehash.
Plus, a human interest aspect; “Nameless diggers drowned by mud in trenches reclaim identity though DNA”,
along with the prospect of a good photo opportunity for the politicians to display their patriotism.
Hi Tim, firstly a Happy Christmas and Best wishes for the New Year, cheers for all the hard work you put in to keep us collectors up to date.
I was so surprised and very pleased that HM are doing the Hawker Fury in 1/48 th scale, I have many colleagues at the engine plant very interested. I will have a word with the Rolls-Royce Heritage about the prop, as the original engine was the Kestrel IV V12 (at a powerful 640hp) is lying around somewhere in the back. I do not believe the wooden prop's were painted, as the paint tends to blunt performance, as no variable constant speed stuff in them days, plus makes repair more difficult. The props would have been varnished that absorbs into the wood and gives the prop a harder surface and helps to stregthen. The paint in the 1930s had no so such qualities, apart from corrosion protection (which is not needed). The leading edge would have a metal shield profile that could be dressed or replaced as the need arised from stones and erosion. Painting props came in when they went to metal for corrosion protection, plus the paint spray technology allowed very thin and uniform application. ( I specialised and help develop the repair of advanced composite rotor blades some years ago – pity Corgi cannot release a sea king with the correct composite blades).
I am dissapointed that Corgi could not release the new tooling models this side of the VAT rise, the rising costs and building frustration with Corgi is not good for collectors. 2011 is going to be tough year for all with little available cash, I have only ordered the first of the new tooling Corgi models, but no others, I am fed up with the old tooling being repainted. The Sea Hawk Dusty Dogs was so terribly inaccurate, the spitfire mk1 has serious over spray…I could go on and on but I will not upset Christmas, though Corgi's 'The Last' Spitfire was well done. Though did not purchase as the HM model 1/48 scale was better value for money and probably more collectable. The rest of my pennies goes to the expanding HM model range, as I think we are in for some real treats in 2011!
If you are in contact with Corgi, please pass on my growing frustration with them, and get them to lower prices. I cannot afford a JU-88 repaint at £50-70 type prices, what ever the low collecting numbers.
hehe i can see your pain after spotin brenda in that t shirt