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    Heavy-duty crate for Airedale who tips over lightweight ones

    This is a specific conversation about Dog crates — the right size and type — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A crate that gets tipped over nightly is genuinely stressful for everyone — and it usually means the crate is too light for the dog's size or temperament. Airedales are strong, determined dogs and a flimsy wire frame simply won't hold its ground against them. Before I point you toward something more solid, a couple of quick questions: how big is your Airedale — roughly how much does he or she weigh — and where does the crate live, is it in a bedroom or a main living area? Also, is the tipping happening because the dog is anxious, or does it seem more like boredom and restlessness?
    She's about 25kg, the crate is in the bedroom. She's not anxious — she just bulldozes it when she wants to get out in the morning. It's a cheap lightweight wire one and it slides and tips on the wooden floor.
    inparticular.ai
    That makes perfect sense. A 25kg Airedale leaning into a lightweight wire crate on a wooden floor is always going to win. What you need is a significantly heavier gauge steel crate with a wider, more stable base — and ideally rubber feet to grip the floor. Is she fully crate trained and settled overnight, or is there still some resistance at bedtime? And is she in there the whole night or just for a few hours in the morning when you're not yet up?
    She's completely fine overnight, no barking or anything. She just wakes up before us and decides she's done. She's in the crate from about 10pm until we get up around 7am.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — so the crate training itself is solid, which is great. This is purely a structural problem, not a behavioural one. For a 25kg Airedale who's physically pushing against the crate, I'd recommend the MidWest Homes for Pets iCrate, specifically the 42-inch double-door model. It's meaningfully heavier than budget wire crates, built from a thicker gauge steel, and has a much more rigid frame that doesn't flex and shift when a dog leans into it. The double-door design means you can orient the door to suit your bedroom layout. Critically, it comes with rubber feet — put it on a rubber-backed mat on that wooden floor and it will not slide or tip. For an Airedale, the 42-inch gives her enough length to stretch out without being so large that it loses that enclosed, den-like feel she's clearly comfortable with. It's widely available on Amazon UK and consistently well reviewed by owners of larger, stronger breeds.
    View MidWest iCrate Folding Dog Crate on Amazon
    That sounds like exactly what we need. Would it be worth getting a crate cover too, or is that unnecessary since she's already settled?
    inparticular.ai
    Since she's already sleeping through the night without issue, a cover is optional rather than essential. That said, it does add a small amount of extra weight and snugness to the whole structure, and some dogs who wake early settle back down longer when the crate feels more enclosed and dark. If your bedroom gets light early, it's worth trying — MidWest make a matching cover for the 42-inch that fits neatly. But honestly, the main fix here is the heavier crate and the mat underneath it. Start there and see how you get on.
    Great, thanks. I'll go for the 42-inch MidWest and get a mat. Really helpful.
    inparticular.ai
    You're all set. The combination of that heavier frame and a grippy mat underneath should completely solve the tipping problem. She sounds like a brilliantly settled dog — she just needs a crate that can stand up to her. Good luck.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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