Saturday, December 15, 2007

To Suite or not to Suite. That is the Question!

Ask not what a SuiteDigs suite might cost.
Ask what not having one might cost you!

Couch, love seat, recliner
Coffee tables, end tables
Shoes, belts, purses, remotes
Wooden table and chair legs
Carpet, wood flooring, linoleum
Drywall, paint, trims, doors and wallpaper
Cabinet drawers and doors
Curtains, draperies, mini-blinds
Albums, VHS tapes, CDs, DVDs, video games
Books, magazines, photo albums
Exercise equipment
Extension cords, wires, lamp cords,
Computer cables, entertainment center wires, cables and cords
Socks, pants, shirts, and coats
Toilet paper, plunger, bowl brush, shower curtain
Towels, soap, personal items, bathroom trash
Drier vent, 220 volt drier cord, water hoses
Garage insulation, stairs, antifreeze, chemicals
Boxes, keepsakes, important documents
Homework, lots and lots of homework

Emergency stomach surgery
Accidental poisoning
Electrocution

Stress on you!
The loss of a special companion.
Your pet's pain and suffering.

It could easily be cheaper to have SuiteDigs than to not have SuiteDigs!

The 4 traditional options to keep your puppy while you are out and why they don't work.

1. Baby Gates

Who wants to have to negotiate over and through these unsightly obstacles? The main problem with baby gates is that they only protect one side of the gate. Which ever side of the gate the puppy is on is the side subject to puppy destruction. Also when your puppy figures out that he can climb over, knock down, or jump over the gate, neither side of the gate is protected.

2. Exercise Pens

These ungainly contraptions are a bigger eyesore than they are solid containment. They are flimsy and easy to push around. Ex pens, as they are called, may scratch your floor more than the puppy inside! Exercise pens have no floor of their own leaving your floor vulnerable to clawing, digging, and soiling. There is no ceiling so they can be climbed or jumped over allowing your puppy to chew, claw, soil all over your home.

3. Crates

Who can feel good about leaving their companion in a box just big enough to turn around in? It’s true that dogs like to sleep in small dark confined “dens” but please, 8 or 10 hours with no chance to relieve himself other than to soil right in his own bed then have to lay in it? 8 week old puppies can’t hold it nearly that long. So are you supposed to recruit your friends and neighbors to come into your home and take your dog outside for however long it takes for the dog to go potty? What if something comes up and no one comes to tend to your dog? How much pain and discomfort does your dog have to endure before he can relieve himself? Besides these crates never look good in your home ant their swing out doors tend to tear holes in your clothes as you walk by.

4. Just put him in a room and close the door

Those doors are made of wood. Hello! Ever seen what a dog can do to a room? Nothing in the room can take what even a small dog can dish out. Linoleum and hardwood floors can be clawed and shredded. Drywall can have holes chewed right in it. Wood trim may be the first to go. Carpet is one of the most difficult items for your vet to surgically remove from your dog’s digestive tract. That’s major surgery likely to cost $1,500 to $2,000.

A SuiteDigs suite is a home for your dog with a room for every purpose. A place to eat and drink, a place to sleep, room to walk around and stairs to climb, and a place to relieve himself when he wants to go. And it looks great and won’t tear your clothes!