Ensure that your pet is receiving enough exercise every day according to their breed, type and individual needs. Different dog breeds require vastly difficult levels of daily activity, and it doesn’t always follow that a small dog needs less exercise!
Two or three exercise periods a day are better than one longer one as it breaks up the boredom of the day better.
Even the smallest dog should be getting at least half an hour of outdoor activity every day – with larger breeds and those designed to work all day needing upwards of two hours, including brain games and training.
They also need social contact – in other words, quality time with you.
Without this, boredom and frustration levels can rise – and, in an attempt to occupy their bodies and brains, they can turn to behaviours like digging. In these cases, it can easily become an obsessive behaviour.
3. Provide adequate mental stimulation
Dogs need as much mental stimulation as physical exercise, and if your dog is left feeling bored throughout the day, their digging may be due to a lack of mental stimulation.
Knowing how to stop a dog digging with mental stimulation is simple: spend quality time with your dog every day doing the things you both enjoy! Playing dog games, training, giving them problem-solving opportunities, and introducing enrichment toys can all help prevent behaviour issues that arise from boredom, frustration or depression.
If you need to leave your dog alone for long periods of time, look at dog walking services or pet sitters who can provide mental stimulation and social contact while you are away.
Discover ideas for dog games that will help engage their brains.
4. Sort out the pest problem!
How to stop a dog digging that is hunting pests in your home or garden is simple: sort out the pest problem!
Find humane ways to catch or trap the problem pests (if it is a rodent issue) or hire experts to do it for you, or sort out a bug infestation.
Always be careful when using chemicals of any kind to treat a pest problem, as they can be toxic to your dog (so make sure any professional you hire is aware of that). It might mean that your garden is off-limits to your dog for a little while.
5. Provide shelter and shade
Although dogs have come from the wild, these days they’re used to their creature comforts! Never leave your dog outside on their own unsupervised. ,Even then, ensure they have access to shade when it’s hot, and shelter when it’s cold. Some dogs can enjoy lying in the sun so much, they don’t remember to move when they overheat or when they need a drink. Older dogs especially are less keen to get up and move if they are stiff or have aching joints. You should also make sure they can always get a drink of fresh water: source an ‘untippable’ dog bowl just to be sure.
How to stop a dog from digging under a fence
For some dogs, the urge to escape is a challenge! There are breeds who are serious Houdinis – no matter how happy they are at home – and tunnelling under a fence is often easier than working out how to get over it!
Check your fencing regularly – and if you do leave your dog outside on their own at any time, make sure your fence is buried down into the ground. If your pet still continues to try to dig under the fence, you can try half-burying rocks along the edge of the fence. Better still, however, go with your dog when they have ‘garden time’, keep them engaged and focused on you, and give them lots of games and outlets for natural behaviour. A dedicated tunneller will nearly always, eventually, find their way out!
If your dog loves digging, and this is part of their natural behaviour, it is unfair of you to ‘stop them from digging’. Instead, put the behaviour under your control in an appropriate place – and give them plenty of other enriching activities so that digging is less appealing than having fun with you.
Check out our basic dog training commands guide for more tips that can help you refrain from your dog’s digging behaviour.