We're still largely focused on night alert training at present and I'm happy to say that Bailey did something out of the ordinary last week. It was around eleven in the evening and I'd just checked in on Jason and he was sound asleep with Bailey sleeping at his side. I'm often up and about at the oddest hours when the rest of the household is snoozing away, so this wasn't unusual for me. I was up for about half an hour when I heard Bailey pawing at the lounge room door to get in. Usually Bailey won't get up when I do and stays by Jason's side. When I let him in he was yawning, obviously having just woken from sleep. Moments later he alerted to a high. I went in to test Jason straight away and sure enough he had a high reading of 15.6. I gave Jason a bolus, rewarded Bailey and praised him profusely as it dawned on me what he'd just done. An hour had passed and I was just about to get the meter out to check Jason's BGL's when Bailey gave me another high alert. When I tested Jason this time his BGL's had risen to 18.5 despite the insulin given. I gave Jason another bolus and then closely monitored him over the next few hours to make sure his BGL's corrected. They didn't rise any further after the second bolus and Bailey didn't give another high alert after the second one. Normally I test Jason's BGL's right before he goes to bed then again at around 2 am and then early morning on a normal night. This would have been a normal night for me because he went to bed in range and there was nothing out of the ordinary going on (that I knew of anyway). So it would have been three hours before I would have tested Jason that night and realised he was high. By this stage his BGL's would have risen significantly and I would have spent the rest of the night checking Jason and having a very broken sleep! So I'm pretty sure this qualifies for Bailey's first ever night alert, making this is a very exciting and promising event for me.