Best DIY projects for Big (or little) Dogs

If you’ve got a big dog (or even just a dog larger than a pug) and you like to craft then you know the struggle of finding fun DIY things to make for them. It’s like the craft world decided that only small dogs like being dressed up or something! Below is a collection of DIYs I’ve found that are either created with larger breeds in mind or are easily adapted to them.

Let me know your favourites!

Dog Hoody

Build a pet agility course

Dog boredom buster

 

DIY Car Safety Hammock

Busy ball toy

Raised dog dining table

 

DIY Flirt Pole

Sew your own winter dog boots

Or

 

I’ve also got a DIY dog bathrobe tutorial coming soon 🙂

 

Prepare your pets for Fireworks Season

Fireworks

When I was a kid I loved Bonfire Night, I loved fireworks and sparklers and checking the bonfire for hedgehogs. Our street always did our own fireworks display in a local horse paddock (sans horses obviously).

Now though Bonfire Night, New Years Eve and lots of other random evenings are spent trying to ignore Apple while she shakes uncontrollably at my feet. This sounds cruel but beyond giving her a safe place to hide and trying to distract her, I don’t have a lot of choice. Cuddling her or reassuring her in a human way would reinforce the idea that there’s something to be afraid of and I hope that with lots of work, she will one day learn that there’s no reason to be scared.

To help your dog or other furry friend cope with Fireworks season wherever you may be in the world, follow these straight-forward tips:

DO:

  • Give your pet somewhere safe and quiet that they can retreat to if they are scared. This could be a crate or a den that you create in the living room if your pet’s crate is usually kept somewhere else.
  • Avoid walking dogs after dark. Some people start setting off fireworks at 5:30 pm when the light has barely disappeared from the sky! Aim for no later than 3 pm in the UK if you can.
  • Close all windows and curtains.
  • Ensure your pet is microchipped in case they escape in their panic.
  • Put the TV on or play music to cover the noise of the fireworks as best you can.
  • Ignore the fireworks yourself, this will encourage your pet to think that there is no reason to be scared.
  • Seek help from a behaviour therapist if your pet appears to have a serious phobia of fireworks.

DON’T:

  • Let dogs out into the garden after dark without a lead. This is not the time to discover that your garden isn’t escape proof.
  • Force your pet to come out of the hiding place, if they feel safe and they aren’t in any danger, leave them be.
  • Try to “de-sensitise” your dog to fireworks by exposing them to a display. Any attempts at behaviour modification should only be done under the supervision of a trained professional.
  • Take your pet to a fireworks display, even if they seem fine, they are most likely not enjoying it. Leave them safely at home.

Shrinking a giant dog bed!

I recently got a little bit over excited by an email from Groupon about waterproof, washable dog beds. In my excitement I didn’t follow the cardinal rule of shopping online. I didn’t check the measurements of the dog bed I bought. Historically, the internet has underestimated the size of my dog in every respect so I’ve usually had to buy XL things for Apple despite her only weighing about 25 kg.

Not this time…

Dog Bed

This bed was FOUR feet long and THREE feet wide. Honestly, it was ridiculous. Apple looked like a tiny pea in the middle of a sea of bed. In fact it was so big that she wouldn’t accept that it was a bed for her, she would get on it if I asked her to but she’d jump straight off 5 seconds later and lie down as far away as possible from it. It was also massively overstuffed and because of the waterproof material it had a lot of air trapped in it, this made the surface uneven and it was difficult for her to manoeuvre on it.

So long story short, it needed to either become something useful or be sent back. I’m notoriously bad at remembering to return items that I’ve bought from the internet and the idea of trying to wrestle it back into the packaging brought tears to my eyes.

I decided to make it into something useful!

This turned out to be more straightforward than I was expecting. I measured Apple’s crate to work out how much of the bed I could use and suddenly realised that if I cut it down the middle widthways I would have a bed that fit perfectly in Apple’s crate. I then realised that if I bought a large zip I could turn the redundant half into another washable, waterproof bed 😀

The first thing I did was remove the inner pillow and put it to one side.

Cover

I then folded the cover in half and pressed it down the line I wanted to cut.

Pressedline

I cut the bed in half:

Sliced

And put the end without the zip to one side. I turned the other end inside out and sewed the open end up with a straight stitch.

zipend

Then I grabbed the pillow and cut a whole through the middle of that as well.

stuffing

I pulled out a full bin bag of stuffing before I could find the other side of the pillow to cut through both sides of the material. I put this bin bag to one side while I decided how much stuffing would be required for one dog bed.

I laid the pillow on top of the new cover to gauge it for size, then sewed up one side and cut off the excess material.

pillow

I turned the cover right side out and put the pillow inside. It fit perfectly and looked great when all zipped up.

Dog Bed

Apple patiently waited on her bed the whole time I was doing this (with a few grumbles)

Applewaiting

The final bed fits perfectly in her crate and she’s no longer scared of it!

Finished

before and after