Dogs with separation anxiety typically experience severe anxiety when you leave them alone, but many begin to work up this anxiety if they suspect you might be leaving the house soon.
Dogs with separation anxiety typically, pace, whine, bark, scratch and chew at windows and doors.
So each time you are doing practice departures, you can use an associated cue or marker to signal this fact and then, once you have worked up practice departures to a time frame of around one to two hours (during which most
dogs with separation anxiety typically have issues), you can use the cue during actual departures to function to «bridge» from practice to actual departures.
Not exact matches
The results of these procedures in
dogs with separation anxiety are
typically within normal limits.