this post was submitted on 09 Mar 2026
436 points (96.0% liked)

Dogs

6947 readers
71 users here now

A community about dogs.

Breeds, tips and tricks about training and behaviour, news affecting dog owners, canine photography, dog-related art and any questions related to dog ownership.

Rules

  1. Posts must be related to dogs or dog ownership and must not be void of content.
  2. This is a neutral space. No bigotry or personal attacks. Criticism should be polite and constructive.
  3. No automated content. This includes AI generated imagery, post body, articles, comments or automated accounts.
  4. No advertising or self-promotion.
  5. Illegal or unethical practices are frowned upon, and any comments or posts suggesting them will be removed. This includes, but is not limited to, backyard breeding, ear and tail cropping, fake service animals, negative reinforcement, alpha/pack/dominance theory, and eugenics.
  6. No judging or attacking community members who care for dogs with cropped ears, docked tails, or those from puppy mills or questionable sources. While we discourage these practices (per Rule 5), all dogs deserve loving homes and compassionate care regardless of their background or physical alterations.
  7. No breed discrimination, all breeds welcome. Our stance matches the ASPCA's official stance and is not up for debate.
  8. Citing your sources when making a claim is encouraged. Misinformation will be removed.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] Obituarykidney@lemmy.world 64 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (4 children)

This is rage bait for sure. My dogs will happily snore cuddled in bed all day. My cat is demanding food at all hours even though he gets fed at exactly 8am and 5pm every day. We call the noise he makes machine gun meows because they are fast, loud, and relentless. The spray bottle lives on my bedside so I can get some sleep.

[โ€“] diffaldo@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 2 days ago

Kitty ๐Ÿฅฐ Also did you take this photo during his meow attack?

[โ€“] nyctre@piefed.social 9 points 2 days ago (1 children)

With my cats, whenever they do something bad I just say "no!" And I go and pick them up and put them somewhere else. Eventually they learn and when you say no they just stop whatever they're doing and go do something else. Works better than training with fear, imo.

I also have dry food available for my cats at all times and I only portion wet food. That's stopped them from asking for food during the night. Probably not a good tip for households that also have dogs, however.

So nowadays I rarely get woken up. When I do it's either because I haven't played enough with them or because of some accident like tipping over something or whatever.

[โ€“] Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 days ago

I have basically the same training technique. I have one cat that doesn't eat all their wet food immediate. When the others have tried to jump in, that no makes them freeze, then lift and remove without pets or other recognition, eventually they stop trying.

Cats aren't untrainable but they aren't dogs so it requires different techniques and expectations.

For keeping the dry food away from dogs, I keep their free feeders in the cat trees but that means getting the ones that have a large enough middle platform.

I also feed them at night because they can't make me going to sleep. They will make mad dashes to the area where they get wet food if they think I'm going to bed.

I don't know if your schedule supports this, but you might have better luck feeding him smaller meals more frequently! My vet said that the "ideal" schedule would be like 10 small meals a day since that would mimic how they eat in the wild but that's pretty unrealistic for basically everyone unless you get an automatic feeder. And then they will just cuddle with the feeder instead of you lol.

[โ€“] SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world -3 points 2 days ago

Your dog doesn't poop?

Get an auto feeder for your cat.