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    Crate to gate for Springer Spaniel

    This is a specific conversation about Pet gates — containing dogs safely — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Moving an 18-month Springer Spaniel from a crate to a gate is a great step — at that age they've usually got the impulse control to handle it, as long as the gate is up to the job. Gate choice comes down to three things: the dog's size and jumping ability, the width of the opening you're blocking, and whether you can wall-mount it or need pressure-fitting. One important safety note upfront — pressure-mounted gates should never be used at the top of stairs. So: how big is your Spaniel, where are you planning to install the gate (doorway, room opening, or stairs), and is drilling into the wall an option for you?
    She's a standard size, about 20kg. I want to keep her in the kitchen during the day. It's a wide opening — probably around 90cm. I can drill if needed.
    inparticular.ai
    Good — 20kg and a kitchen doorway makes this straightforward, but Springers are athletic and can clear a standard gate easily if they're motivated. What's her jumping like? Has she ever tried to vault a barrier, or is she generally respectful of boundaries when she knows she's meant to stay put?
    She's pretty good honestly. She's never tried to jump the crate or anything. I think she'll respect a gate as long as it looks like a proper barrier.
    inparticular.ai
    That's really helpful — if she's not a jumper, you don't need to go to an extra-tall gate, which keeps your options open. For a 90cm doorway opening with a dog that respects boundaries, I'd go with the Safetots Extra Wide Baby and Pet Gate. It's a wall-mounted, screw-fit gate that spans openings from 75cm up to around 150cm with the included extensions, so your 90cm opening is no problem. It stands 73cm tall — plenty for a respectful Springer — has a smooth one-handed release that she won't figure out, and the build quality is genuinely solid. It's also one of the tidier-looking gates, which matters when it's in a kitchen you look at every day. Around £50–60 on Amazon UK and it fits exactly what you've described.
    View Safetots Extra Wide Hallway Gate on Amazon
    That sounds good. Is installation complicated? I'm reasonably handy but not a professional.
    inparticular.ai
    It's a 20-minute job if you're comfortable with a drill. Four wall plugs, a spirit level, and you're done. The instructions are clear and the fixings are included. One tip: check which side of the frame is load-bearing if you're going into a door surround rather than solid wall — makes a small difference to how secure the anchors sit. But honestly, for someone who's reasonably handy this is about as easy as wall-mounting gets.
    Perfect, I think that's the one. Thanks.
    inparticular.ai
    You're all set. The Safetots Extra Wide is a solid choice for what you need — durable, easy to use daily, and right-sized for a 20kg Spaniel in a standard kitchen doorway. Good luck with the transition; most dogs settle into the new routine within a few days once the gate feels like a normal part of the space.

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

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