What You Should Know About Your Dog’s Sleeping Habits

It’s important to understand your dog’s sleeping habits and how
they influence its behavior, particularly when your dog gets
disturbed.

You see, Dogs will usually sleep for around 13 hours every day.
Although this can vary between different breeds, this still
means your dog is going to be asleep for almost half it’s life!

Dream time.

Your dog will tend to circle before lying down to sleep

As he would do in the wild, where he would trample down
vegetation to create a bed, typically in longer grass where his
presence will be concealed.

Temperature also influences the way in which a dog sleeps.

If it’s cold, your dog will curl up in a ball to conserve body
heat. (just as puppies do by sleeping together instead of
stretching out).

It’s not unusual for an adult dog to lie on his side while he’s
sleeping, and start moving his legs as if he were running.

The eyelids and whiskers may twitch too at this stage, which is
usually a sign of what we humans call ‘deep sleep’.

Dogs generally spend most of their time sleeping lightly.

Sleeping habits.

Seeing as dogs are descended from opportunistic hunters, dogs
instinctively wake when there is an increased amount of activity
around them.

However, if a dog is deliberately woken, particularly if it is
disturbed by a child, he may react aggressively and bite without
warning.

The phrase ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ should give you a clue!

Also, your dog may be a little unwilling to settle down again if
woken at an unusual hour.

This means it’s important to establish a set routine for a new
dog from the outset. This includes things like exercising,
feeding and sleeping times.

A new puppy is likely to be distressed on its first few nights
in a new home, as this will be the first time that he will have
been separated from its littermates.

Within a pack, there is no visible hierarchy in the order in
which the dogs sleep, although they will instinctively sleep
close to their fellow members. (Although the alpha dog will
usually sleep apart).

If your new pup has been allowed to spend the night in the
bedroom, it can become problematic to expect it to sleep
elsewhere.

Its instincts suggest that it has been driven away from the pack.

By being firm right from the start and establishing that your
dog sleeps on his own, you can ensure that he doesn’t experience
this ‘rejection’ once he gets a little older.

Dogs can get restless during the night if they’re not exercised
regularly. Although he may also nap continually if there isn’t
much happening.

While you are out, your dog may find its way to your bed, just
to be near your smell. An old item of clothing, which will carry
your scent, will comfort your dog when you are not there.

Sleeping postures.

Puppies often appreciate contact with littermates when sleeping,
just in the same way that many dogs prefer to lie against a wall
or next to their owner’s feet. This probably gives them a sense
of security