Archive for the 'Dog Training' Category

Teaching the “Quiet” Command

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Kristi November 20th, 2007

For some reason my dog barks at other dogs even when the other dog isnt barking at all. She just barks and barks and barks at other dogs. I really was not sure what to do but then I came across a great article about teaching the “quiet” command.

Behavioral therapy to control barking is not only gentle, but fun; it’s usually very successful; and it’s very long-lasting. Teach the dog that the word “quiet” means to stop barking. The simplest way to do that is to have the dog with you, get him to bark by excited play or whatever–bark at him, he’ll mimic you. Then after a few barks, gently hold his mouth shut as you say “quiet”.

He has to be quiet because you’re holding his mouth shut. You then praise him lavishly for being quiet with something like “Good quiet, that’s it, good quiet!!” Repeat that a few times and soon the word “quiet” will be learned.

This may also be the first time the dog was praised a lot for shutting up. Once the dog knows what “quiet” means and that it’s lavishly rewarded, you begin to communicate effectively in an actual situation. When the dog begins to bark at something, the first thing you say is, “Good dog, that’s it!” “Good speak!” That ought to confuse the little whipper!. It may be the first time you praised him for barking.

Your voice is excited and full of praise. You immediately follow that with a neutral, “okay” and then a firm “quiet”. Then, of course, you reward the silence by sincerely praising the dog for shutting up. The entire routine sounds like this: “Good dog, good speak!” “Okay.” “Quiet.” “Good quiet!!!” Goooood quiet!” There! You’ve just successfully communicated exactly what you mean to the dog–that it’s okay to bark at the stranger, but after the initial alert, stop.

The article goes on to state:

There are many okay barking circumstances, so you want to control the act, not eliminate it. Don’t teach the dog that all barking is bad, because that’s not true. Control is the key here, and this may be the first and only time that that’s so. With most problems, your goal is to eliminate them.

With barking your goal should be to teach discrimination. You’ll never be glad your dog bit you, but there sure are times you’ll be glad he barked.

To read the article in full click http://www.terrificpets.com/articles/stories.asp?art=18
Author: Dennis Fetko, Ph.D., “Dr. Dog
Email: www.DrDogsBehaviorSolutions.com
Website: http://www.DrDogsBehaviorSolutions.com
Description: The author, Dr. Dennis Fetko, “Dr. Dog” is a world-renowned animal behaviorist who has appeared on the 20/20 television show, managed the reintroduction of captive-bred Arabian Oryx into the Saudi Arabian National Wildlife Research Center, and made a presentation at the South American Veterinary Congress. His ebook, Dr. Dog’s FAST, EASY FUN Behavior Solutions, reveals his proven methods for eliminating barking, jumping, chewing, digging, pulling and his puppy housetraining methods. Learn more at http://www.DrDogsBehaviorSolutions.com.

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Separation Anxiety…

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Kristi October 8th, 2007

There have been many times when I come back from the store only to find a pillow with the insides out or a shoe destroyed. I found some advice from the Peninsula Humane Society on the topic.

Many dogs whine, bark, scratch at the door or destroy your home and yard when left alone. We often unintentionally train our dogs to behave this way. Whenever the dog throws a tantrum when we leave, we quickly come back to reassure the dog, or even give a biscuit or bone, thinking this will give her something to do while we’re away. The dog soon learns that she can control you with emotional blackmail. We also add to the problem by having long, drawn-out emotional farewells before leaving. This only excites the dog and makes the isolation more obvious. The dog is worked up and ready to play, then suddenly you disappear. Then, he either makes a fuss so that you will come back, or vents his energy some other way — chewing, digging and barking are favorites. We think she does this to show anger for being left alone, but she’s really just trying to have fun since there is nothing else to do.

The article goes on to give some excellent advice.

Your dog needs to feel happy, secure and comfortable when you’re away. Provide her with lots of toys or a digging pit in the yard. Often, another companion animal can help alleviate boredom, but be careful. Adding another dog to your household to make up for your lack of time for the first dog is usually a mistake.
Each separation anxiety behavior needs to be explored individually, but there are some things that will help any of these behaviors.

Set up a routine

  • Feed on a schedule
  • Supervise Elimination
  • Quality interaction with family members
  • Groom
  • Train
  • Socialize with other dogs and things that are unfamiliar to the dog

Attend a training class

  • Exposes the dog to new people and dogs in a controlled environment
  • The dog will learn basic commands
  • The dog’s confidence will increase
  • Speeds up the bonding process between the dog and family members

Leave the dog with interactive toys that will keep him occupied, such as kongs (thick, hollow rubber toy available in several sizes) - rub the inside with peanut butter, cream cheese or honey, or stuff the kong with kibble and a few small pieces of cheese.

For the full article please click here.

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Train your dog to walk on a treadmill

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Darren October 3rd, 2007

Every dog needs an outside walk daily. You can supplement that by training your dog to walk on a treadmill. There are doggie treadmills available on the internet (links included), or you can teach your dog to walk on a human treadmill.
Nestle Purina trainer Jennifer McDonald uses patience and postive reinforcement to teach dogs to walk on a treadmill. She starts by coaxing the dog onto the treadmill, and she holds the dog’s collar when she starts the treadmill.
Eventually, dogs learn to walk on their own.

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Video Examples:

Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.

Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.

Around the Web:

Jog a Dog

Pawwws Pet Treadmills

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How To Teach Your Dog To Shake Hands

How To Avoid Bad Doggy Behavior, And Teach Your Puppy Some Manners

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Kristi September 25th, 2007

by: Niall Kennedy

A poorly trained dog can embarrass its owner and offend other people - or even make them feel threatened.

Teaching your dog some manners is just common-sense. You did it with your children and your parents did it with you. If you had never learned right from wrong you would be behaving badly so why expect to be able to raise a dog without any coaching? He has lots to learn.

There’s a popular saying among dog trainers: “There’s no such thing as a bad dog.” While that may be true, any trainer will admit that there are dogs with very bad habits. When a dog acts or reacts to a situation in a way that has a negative impact on her owner or others, the behavior is considered to be “bad.” Yet, to the dog, it’s just what she does. Stopping bad behavior requires training to give the dog a new behavior, or habit.

A great example from this article about a specific behavior is one that I work with all time.

One of the most common bad behaviors is jumping up on people. This habit is established when a dog is a puppy. Puppies jump at their mother to get her attention so she will feed them. Dog owners find it adorable that their puppy works so hard to get their attention as she jumps. The naive owners come down to the dog’s level or pick the puppy up, not realizing they have just rewarded the dog for jumping and barking. A sharp ‘NO’ will stop the jumping. Also, ignore the dog and avoid eye contact when she jumps to discourage such behavior.

For the following behavior problem I use a “Bitter Apple” spray. It works very well.

Another unpopular behavior is chewing. Destructive chewing is most often an indication your dog is bored. If your dog chews up the couch cushions or destroys a wicker chair while you are at work, it is probably because she had nothing else to do. If you look up from a book or television to find your dog chewing on your favorite shoes, realize that she is releasing pent-up energy. Give your dog the chance to exercise her body and brain. Plenty of physical exercise will tire her out so that she naps while you relax. Pet supply stores carry a variety of toys that provide mental stimulation-doggie puzzles to keep your pooch busy while you’re away. Also, if your dog is a chewer, make sure you give her chewing toys of her own. It is never a good idea to give your dog an old shoe or sock to chew on; she can’t tell the difference between your favorites and your discards and they all smell like you.

For the full article see: Puppy News

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Tips on Chihuahua Training

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Darren September 25th, 2007

A good obedience class to train your Chihuahua is always helpful. However, you don’t have to go to obedience classes. Many classes are especially for handling big, out-of-control dogs and may emphasize force methods to try and dominate and calm these dogs. These methods are not good for Chihuahuas, or any dog for that matter. If you run into instructors and classes like this, you are better off training your Chihuahua on your own or with other small-dog owners.

Old-fashioned force-training methods are ineffective and no fun for your dog either. Chihuahuas respond best to amendable training and only the gentlest of techniques.

Some guidelines to keep in mind:

  • Guide, don’t force. Chihuahuas want to please you. Your job is to show them what pleases you. If you force a Chihuahua you might bring out that notorious Chi stubborn streak.
  • Punishment does not work. Chihuahuas seldom require anything but a mild correction.
  • Accentuate the positive. Reward your dog for behaviors that please you.
  • Will work for food. Your Chihuahua will work better for training sessions if her stomach is not full. She will be more responsive to food rewards on an empty stomach.
  • Happy endings. Keep sessions short and fun, no longer than 10 to 15 minutes. Begin and end each training session with something your dog can do well.

Chihuahuas are intelligent. Just because your Chihuahua lives a life of leisure does not mean she can’t learn tricks. Chihuahuas don’t hunt, herd or guard so they don’t have an opportunity to show off like some of the other breeds. Obedience and agility trials give Chihuahuas a chance to show what they can do. But you don’t have to compete in the competitions to enjoy training your Chihuahua. Training should be a fun time for both of you. Chihuahuas need to have some kind of schooling.

Clicker training works well for Chihuahuas. In clicker training you teach the dog that a “click” sound signals a coming reward. A clicker signal is used because it is fast, noticeable, and something the dog otherwise does not encounter in everyday life. Once the dog associates the click with an upcoming reward, you wait for the dog to do the behavior you want her to do. The instant she does so, you click to tell the dog her behavior deserves a reward. Then you give her the treat. If the dog makes a mistake, no treat. You just wait for her to do it right, then reward with a treat.

Connie Limon raises Shih Tzu puppies. She owns Little Guys Dog Clothes Shop.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Connie_Limon

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Dogs, handlers learn to boogie and disco

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Darren September 24th, 2007

Dancing With The DogsLearn to do Twists, cha-cha steps and other boogie dancing moves with your furry friends. No seriously, for $275 you can get a room, meals, and lesson on “everything from costumes to music and training tactics.”

Ricky the Dalmatian “spun across the floor with his 68-year-old handler, the high stepping Mary Ann Coutley” who were one of 23 pairs of handlers and pets that participated in the three-day dog dancing class at the Army Lake Camp and Retreat Center.

“You have to pick out music that goes with your dog,” Blanchard says. “The dogs can do figure eights around your legs. They spin, and we spin. Sometimes they’re on their hind legs. They can wave, do marching things, jump over things.”

Coutley used to dance with a 12-year-old Dalmatian named Wynona, who died in April. She is grooming Ricky to be her new partner with daily workouts that include six miles on a treadmill.

“He’s a chow hound,” Coutley said, feeding 1-year-old Ricky some turkey hot dogs. “He’ll work for anything.”

Is this the first time we’ve had doggy dancing? Nope.

While “Dancers with Woofs K9 Freestyle Dance Camp” purported to be the first in the region, enthusiasts have been dancing with dogs since the 1980s. They formed the World Canine Freestyle Organization in 1999.

Elements of Canine Musical Freestyle:

  • Costume
  • Music
  • Choreography

Full Story

Photo: CBS News

Around the Web:

Canine Freestyle Federation

Dancing With Your Dog

Sit, stay, cha-cha-cha (from jsonline.com)

Doggy Dancing Videos:

doggydance, heelwork to music, caninefreestyle Twizzle:

Doggy Dance FlevoDogShow:

doggy dance:

Have you boogied with your pet? Tell us about it!

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Do Dogs Think?

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Kristi September 22nd, 2007

This has been one of my favorite articles written about dog behavior and how a dog’s mind might work:

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Owners assume their pet’s brain works like their own. That’s a big mistake.
By Jon Katz

Blue, Heather’s normally affectionate and obedient Rottweiler, began tearing up the house shortly after Heather went back to work as an accountant after several years at home. The contents of the trash cans were strewn all over the house. A favorite comforter was destroyed. Then Blue began peeing all over Heather’s expensive new living room carpet and systematically ripped through cables and electrical wires.

“I know exactly what’s going on,” Heather told her vet when she called seeking help. “Blue is angry with me for leaving her alone. She’s punishing me. She always looks guilty when I come home, so she knows she’s been bad. She knows she shouldn’t be doing those things.”

Heather’s assessment was typical of many dog owners’ diagnoses of behavioral problems. And her vet agreed, suggesting “separation anxiety” and prescribing anti-anxiety medication for Blue. Heather also hired a trainer, who confirmed the diagnosis.

Blue, they concluded, was resentful at her owner’s absence and was misbehaving to regain the attention that she’d once monopolized. After all, Blue didn’t transgress like this when Heather went out shopping or took in a movie with friends. It must be punitive. Heather’s mother even recalled Heather, as a child, throwing tantrums when she went off to work. Heather and Blue had become so close, she joked, that they were acting alike.

So Heather shut Blue in the kitchen with a toddler gate, removing countertop food and garbage. Things calmed down. Heather began to relax and gave Blue the run of the house again.

Heather, a friend of a friend, had called me for counsel as well. But since she, her vet, her trainer, and her mother had all reached the same conclusion, and since the rampaging had stopped, I didn’t give the situation much thought.

A month later, though, Heather was back on the phone: Blue had relapsed. She yowled piteously when confined to the kitchen or basement. Worse, she was showing signs of aggression with people and other dogs and refusing to obey even simple commands that were once routine. On one late-night walk, Blue attacked a terrier walking nearby, opening wounds that needed stitches.

Blue’s problems had grown so serious that kennels wouldn’t board the dog and the vet wouldn’t examine her without a muzzle. Heather was thinking of finding her another home, turning her over to a rescue group, possibly even euthanizing her.

“She’s out of control,” Heather complained, exhausted, angry, and frightened. She sounded betrayed—a dog she’d loved and cared for was turning on her because she went to work. “I caused this by leaving her,” Heather confessed, guiltily. But was she supposed to quit her job to stay home with her dog?

This time, Heather got my full attention. I took notes, asked questions, then called a canine behaviorist at Cornell and explained the problem in as much detail as I could.

“Everybody says the dog was reacting to her going back to work,” I suggested.

“Everybody is probably wrong,” was his blunt comeback. “It’s ‘theory of mind.’ This is what often happens when humans assume that dogs think the way we do.”

His analysis: “Being angry at the human and behaving punitively—that’s not a thought sequence even remotely possible, given a dog’s brain. The likely scenario is that the dog is simply frightened.” When Heather was home, she was there to explain and enforce the rules. With her gone, the dog literally didn’t know how to behave. The dog should have been acclimated to a crate or room and confined more, not less, until she got used to her new independence.

Lots of dogs get nervous when they don’t know what’s expected of them, and when they get anxious, they can also grow restless. Blue hadn’t had to occupy time alone before. Dogs can get unnerved by this. They bark, chew, scratch, destroy. Getting yelled at and punished later doesn’t help: The dog probably knows it’s doing something wrong, but it has no idea what. Since there’s nobody around to correct behaviors when the dog is alone, how could the dog know which behavior is the problem? Which action was wrong?

He made sense to me. Dogs are not aware of time, even as a concept, so Blue couldn’t know whether she was being left for five minutes or five hours, or how that compared to being left for a movie two weeks earlier. Since she had no conscious notion that Heather’s work life had changed, how could she get angry, let alone plot vengeance? The dog was alone more and had more time to fill. The damage was increasing, most likely, because Blue had more time to get into mischief and more opportunities to react to stimulus without correction—not because she was responding to different emotions.

I was familiar with the “theory of mind” notion the behaviorist was referring to. Psychologist David Premack of the University of Pennsylvania talks about it; it’s also discussed in Stanley Coren’s How Dogs Think.

The phrase refers to a belief each of us has about the way others think. Simply, it says that since we are aware and self-conscious, we think others—humans and animals—are, too. There is, of course, enormous difference of opinion about whether this is true.

When I used to leave my border collie Orson alone in the house, uncrated, he learned to open the refrigerator with his nose, remove certain food items, open the plastic container, and consume its contents. Then he’d squirrel away the empty packages. Everyone I told this story made the same assumptions: Orson was a wily devil taunting me for leaving him alone. We actually installed a child lock on the refrigerator door. But what changed his behavior was that I began to crate him when I went out. He has not raided the fridge since. Yet he could easily sneak in and do that while he’s uncrated and I’m occupied outdoors or elsewhere in the house. Is he no longer wily? Or is he simply less anxious?

There’s no convincing evidence I’m aware of, from any reputable behaviorist or psychologist, that suggests dogs can replicate human thought processes: use language, think in narrative and sequential terms, understand human minds, or share humans’ range of emotions.

Yet that remains a powerful, pervasive view of dogs, the reason Heather’s vet, trainer, and mother all agreed on Blue’s motivations. It’s almost impossible not to lapse into theory-of-mind reasoning when it comes to our dogs. After all, most of us have no other way in which to grasp another creature’s behavior. How can one even begin to imagine what’s going on inside a dog’s head?

Most of the time, I don’t know why my dogs do what they do. They seem aware that I have a way of doing things. They’ve learned that we don’t walk in the street, that I don’t distribute food from my plate, that there will be a bone or treat after dinner. But they are creatures of habit and instinct, especially when it comes to food, work, and attention. I often think of them as stuff-pots wedded to ritual, resistant and nervous about change.

I don’t believe that dogs act out of spite or that they can plot retribution, though countless dog owners swear otherwise. To punish or deceive requires the perpetrator to understand that his victim or object has a particular point of view and to consciously work to manipulate or thwart it. That requires mental processes dogs don’t have.

The more I’ve moved away from interpreting my dogs’ behavior as nearly human, the easier it is to train them, and the less guilt and anxiety I feel.

To attribute complex thoughts and plots to their actions unravels the training process. Training and living with a dog requires a different theory: that these are primal, predatory animals driven by instinct. Rather than seeking animal clues to her dog’s behavior, Heather imagined herself as the dog. She reasoned that if she, Heather, were suddenly left alone for long periods, abandoned by someone she loved and used to spend a lot of time with, she would feel angry and hurt and might try to get even, not only to punish her companion but to try to persuade him or her to return.

That’s attributing a lot of intellectual activity to an animal that can recognize a few dozen words but has none of its own, that reads human emotions but doesn’t experience the same ones. Since the Cornell behaviorist made sense to me, I conveyed his analysis: The dog didn’t know how to behave with Heather gone. Crating Blue would reduce her anxiety and give her less chance to act up. I persuaded Heather—by now distraught—to buy a large crate. For weeks, she fed the dog in the crate, leaving the door open. Between meals, she left treats and bones inside.

The first time Heather closed the crate door, Blue threw herself against the metal, whining and howling. The same thing happened the second, third, fifth, and dozenth times. But Heather, cautioned that training and retraining often takes weeks and months, persisted. Sometimes she left the treat-filled crate open; other times she closed it.

After several weeks, Blue began to go into the crate willingly and remained there quietly for short, then lengthening periods. Heather walked Blue two or three times daily; when she was gone for more than three or four hours, she hired a dog walker to take her out an additional time and throw a ball. But whenever Heather left the house, she put Blue in the crate and left a nearby radio tuned to a talk network.

This time, Heather got it right, treating Blue as a dog, not a rebellious teenager. Blue improved dramatically, and the improvement continues. Her aggression diminished, then seemed to vanish, although Heather no longer lets her near dogs or children unleashed. It seemed the dog had comprehensible rules to follow, and felt safer.

Blue was liberated from the confusion, anxiety, and responsibility of figuring out what to do with her unsupervised and sudden freedom. Once again there was little tension between the two of them. Heather’s house wasn’t getting chewed up, and homecomings weren’t tense and angry experiences. Yet here was a case, I thought, where seeing canine behavior in human terms nearly cost an animal its life.

Sometimes it does. Harry, a social worker in Los Angeles, wrote me that he had a great rescue dog named Rocket and was happy enough with the experience to adopt a second. Rocket attacked the new dog while Harry was feeding them, then bit a neighborhood kid. “He never forgave me for getting the new dog,” Harry explained. “He was so angry with me. I couldn’t trust him not to take out his rage on others, so I had him put to sleep.”

We will never know, of course, what Rocket could or could not forgive. Rocket probably didn’t attack the new dog out of anger at Harry. He was more likely protecting his food or pack position. The creature in the household with the most to lose from a new arrival, he probably simply fought for what he had. Then, once aroused, he was more dangerous. As trainers know, dogs under pressure have two options: fight or flight. Rocket decided to fight and paid for it with his life. Had his owner known more about dogs’ true nature, he might have introduced the new dog more gradually, or not at all. And there might be one less bitten child. But this is all a guess. We will never know.

When I face such training problems—and I do, we all do—I try to adopt a Sherlock Holmesian strategy, using logic and determination. We have all sorts of tools at our disposal that dogs don’t have. We control every aspect of their lives, from food to shelter to play, so we ought to be able to figure out what’s driving the dog and come up with an individually tailored approach that works—and if it doesn’t, come up with another one.

Why will Clementine come instantly if she’s looking at me, but not if she’s sniffing deer droppings? Is it because she’s being stubborn or, as many people tell me, going through “adolescence”? Or because, when following her keen predatory instincts, she simply doesn’t hear me? Should my response be to tug at her leash or yell? Maybe I should be sure we’ve established eye contact before I give her a command, or better yet, offer a liver treat as an alternative to whatever’s distracting her. But how do I establish eye contact when her nose is buried? Can I cluck or bark? Use a whistle or hoot like an owl?

I’ve found that coughing, of all things, fascinates her, catches her attention, and makes her head swivel, after which she responds. If you walk with us, you will hear me clearing my throat repeatedly. What can I say? It works. She looks at me, comes to me, gets rewarded.

The reality is, we don’t know that much about what dogs think, because they can’t tell us. Behaviorists tend to believe that dogs “think” in their own way—in sensory images involving their finely honed instincts. They’re not capable of deviousness or spite. They love routine: Nothing seems to make them more comfortable than doing the same thing at the same time in the familiar way, day after day: We snack here, we poop there, we play over here. I am astonished at how little it takes to please them, how simple their lives can be if we don’t complicate them.”

http://www.slate.com/id/2127419/

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Tips and Techniques to Train Your New Puppy

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Darren September 22nd, 2007

Australian Shepherd puppy red merleAlthough training a new puppy can seem like a challenge, it is easier than you might think. All dog training requires is a little patience, persistence and repetition. It is important to note that dogs exhibit many common behaviors. Facial expressions and posture can indicate exactly what your dog is thinking and feeling which will enable you to identify and control any behavior problems that may arise. A happy or friendly dog who wants to play will have ears that are perked up, a wide eyed, look, wagging tail and an open mouth that looks like he’s smiling. An aggressive dog will have his lips open to show his teeth, his tail straight back with hairs sticking out, a challenging look in his eyes and a tense body. Identifying your dog’s mood will allow you to react appropriately, which will ultimately help with dog training.

The first and most important rule in dog training is to let your dog know who is boss. Once you get your dog to respect you as his leader, everything else will be much easier. Dogs in the wild travel in a pack with a leader. One thing you should do is make your dog watch you eat, then feed him after you are done. In the wild, the leader of the pack feeds on the prey first, then lets the others eat. If your dog begs while you are eating, growling at him will let him know that begging is not an acceptable behavior. If your dog is in your path, gently nudge him to make him move out of your way. Stepping over him or around him will let him think he is the boss. Rubbing your dogs belly is a way to teach him submission as well as encouraging him to lick the back of your hand to show him that you are the leader.

Dog training requires a lot of patience and consistency. Dog training sessions should be short (10 to 15 minutes a session) and frequent (several times a day). Try to remain consistent in your training. If you always let your dog out the back door, don’t change and let him out the front door. Dogs are easily confused and changing things up can undo all your hard work. Be sure to reward good behavior rather than punishing bad behavior. It is important, however, to correct inappropriate behavior while it is taking place, not after.

Other than housebreaking your dog, there are several tricks you can train your dog to do on command. You can teach your dog to sit by saying “Sit” and gently nudging him down. Reward his behavior by giving him a treat when he obeys your command. You can also teach your dog to shake your hand by putting his paw in your hand while saying “Shake”, then giving him a treat. Do this often enough and he will begin to do it on his own. Other tricks that are typically taught are to jump, fetch, lie down and stay still. Use a firm steady voice and remain patient and calm. It is best to try to teach these tricks while your dog is still young as the saying goes, you can’t teach an old dog new tricks. Dog training can seem frustrating at times but in the end it very rewarding.

Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to Dog Training

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Michael_Russell

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Cesar Millan the Dog Trainer

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Darren September 22nd, 2007

 

Cesar MillanNot all of us can be a dog trainer. This may be due to work or simply due to not knowing enough about dog behavior in order to train our pets effectively. A good trainer knows that there is more to training than simply teaching the dog to walk on a leash. He or she can weed out dog aggression and help pet owners understand the rules of the canine world. A dog trainer can be a great investment if it means your dog’s safety and your sanity.

Maybe you have not heard of a show called “The Dog Whisperer” featuring world renowned dog trainer Cesar Millan but it has gained tremendous popularity as more and more pet owners turn to his expertise to show us how to love and care for our dogs. He is famous for his pet training obedience classes as well as coming into select family homes to show them that a dog trainer teaches both the dog and owner how to coexist and be a happy family.

Why is this particular dog trainer so popular? It is because he takes dogs that might otherwise be a nuisance or a danger to others, and rehabilitates them on the dog’s level. He understands the mindset of a canine and as such can make tremendous strides in training a dog. There are dogs on the show that were not given any puppy training and have come to rule their owners. They bark, growl and bite. Yet, Millan goes into the house and interacts with the dogs using “pack mentality” that works.

Cesar Millan pushes the idea that the owner must be the dog trainer. He or she must become the Alpha in the household and not let the dog run the show. An Alpha member of the pack is the one who makes the decisions. He or she dictates what happens within the group. The dog owner must be the Alpha in order for the dog to know who is in charge and what is expected of him or her.

If you do not have the opportunity to watch an episode of “The Dog Whisperer” you can still find out more about Cesar Millan and his training practices. His website, www.cesarmillaninc.com, offers valuable tips and advice on dealing with pooch problems. You can talk to other dog owners as well as read articles from the veterinarian on staff.

Mike LaVallee is the webmaster of Designer Canines a website about hybrid dogs like the Puggle also including Mutts, Dog Health and general canine care and information.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mike_LaVallee

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Basic Dog Training Tips

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Darren September 22nd, 2007

Yellow LabradorTraining your dog should be a fun experience where both you and your pet benefit from working together. Unfortunately, too many owners get discouraged in the training process when they fail to make any noticeable progress. This tends to happen when the owner is unprepared from the beginning. In order to help prevent this mistake, here are some basic dog training tips to get you off to a successful start.

Be Patient

It takes time to establish communication channels with your pet. You have to start at the most basic level, assuming your dog knows nothing about what you are doing. This requires a great deal of patience at first, but it is imperative that you display a calm demeanor. Your dog can sense when you are frustrated or upset, and this could intimidate or scare them. Take things slow and know when to stop for the day. This will help insure that your sessions stay fun and productive.

Use Encouragement

Frustration can bring on negative reactions such as scolding or yelling. If you are not careful, then you might find yourself constantly reprimanding your dog throughout the training sessions. This will only confuse your pet and lead to a disinterest in learning. Constant positive reinforcement is the best strategy to creating a constructive learning environment. Make sure to reward your dog for effort, even if he dog doesn’t get a command exactly right.

Repetition is Key

It is understandable to want to move on to the next lesson when your dog performs a command correctly. You are excited about your pet’s progress and you want to keep things moving in the right direction. But the best strategy is to master one task before starting the next one. This is accomplished through repetition exercises, and it is by far the most important step in successful training. Start every new lesson by reviewing previous lessons. Build your dog’s confidence by letting him perform tasks he is familiar with before progressing with new material.

Maintain Structure

Getting your dog into the proper mindset for learning can help improve his retention rate. This can be accomplished by adding consistency and structure to your training sessions. If possible, work with your dog at the same time everyday and keep you’re the sessions under one hour. Start and end each session with a review of tasks they are already familiar with, and try to work on only one new command each time. Familiarity with your training structure will help your dog feel more comfortable. They will know what to expect and they will understand what is expected of them.

There is much more to dog training than just the lessons you teach. There is a psychological element that must also be addressed if you want to save time and frustration. Use the basic dog training tips above to establish the parameters of your training. From there you can concentrate on teaching the actual tasks and commands.

Training your dog doesn’t have to be a stressful ordeal. Visit DogBookReview.com to read comprehensive dog training book reviews that will help you find the best resource for your goals.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Xavier_Gallery

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Army Honors Its ‘Top Dogs’

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Darren September 21st, 2007

Army Honors Its ‘Top Dogs’FORT MEADE, Md. (The Military District of Washington, Sept. 21, 2007) — the 2007 Canine Competition at Fort Meade was held last week.  Twenty-four teams (a handler and his dog) competed for four days.

The military news release states that the competition’s events “were activities that handlers practice with their dogs on a regular basis.”

“We train full day,” Sgt. Moll said. “Every minute that we are not doing a mission, we are training our dogs. We work hands on with the dogs several hours every week.”

“This is the best job in the whole Army,” Sgt. Moll said. “It’s a unique job and people look up to us. The best part is coming in and getting to work with the dogs every day. It’s one handler, one dog, so over time you build a really strong bond and you definitely get attached to the dog you work with.”

The dogs and their handlers were judged in seven categories including:

  • Explosives
  • Narcotics Detection
  • Hardest Hitting
  • Patrolling

“A lot of this is to promote esprit de core within the installations,” said David Reiter, MDW K-9 Program manager. “This is a way of rewarding them so they can show off their talent and their hard work throughout the year. I am very impressed. These here are top-notch professionals that we are dealing with. They did excellent work this week.”

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Photo: Department of the ArmyMax sits docilely atop a 55-gallon drum for his handler, Sgt. Kyle Harris of the Fort Belvoir kennel. The 212th MP Detachment dog stood out as the hardest-hitting dog in the MDW Canine Competition and displayed excellent obedience on the patrol dog course where there were distractions at every turn.

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Can Dogs Smell Cancer?

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Darren September 17th, 2007

Carolyn Withers is convinced that her dog Myles saved her life.

In September 1999 she says her normally laid-back Labrador retriever started jumping, barking and poking his nose under her arm, near her right breast. At first she thought nothing of it. Then one night, she could no longer ignore him.

“I had gone to bed and Myles actually lunged right onto the bed, and he never did that,” Withers said. “And he, you know, dodged right towards my arm area, and started barking. He was in a panic. And that’s when all of a sudden I felt this real fear.”

After doing a breast self-examination, she found what felt like a small pearl. She says she knew immediately that it was cancer. Withers had surgery and is now fine.

Was it coincidence? Did Myles really detect the cancer? Is this possible? Manhattan veterinarian Andrew Kaplan said we’d be amazed at the information a dog’s nose might provide because “a dog has approximately 220 million smell receptors in their nose, and people have about 5 million.”

So what are dogs smelling and how accurate can they actually be at detecting cancer? What is truly amazing is that the dogs trained to spot cancer “nailed it 90 percent of the time in thousands of trials” according to a study in the journal Integrative Cancer Therapies.

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The Amazing Skidboot has Passed Away

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Kristi September 16th, 2007

I was sent this video about a year ago. I remember thinking how amazing communication can be between humans and their canine friends. With consistency and patience dogs can do amazing things.

Rest in peace Skidboot!

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Does Your Dog Need a Bark Collar?

Email to a Friend Email to a Friend Kristi September 13th, 2007

I wanted to post this article because I know ther are a lot of questions out there regarding bark collars and which one is right for your dog. I was told that a shock collar can cause brain damage to a small dog under 10 pounds. I am a fan of the Cintronella Bark Collar and the Untrasonic bark collar.

“Bark collars are specially designed to discourage a dog’s excessive or inappropriate barking. Since they rely on negative reinforcement, they should only be used under certain circumstances. A dog bark collar doesn’t address the underlying cause of the barking, so it should be used with other training methods to insure the behavior change is permanent. Otherwise your dog may revert to old habits when the collar is removed, or adopt other undesirable habits such as digging, or become destructive or even aggressive.”

Below are the descriptions of the two best collars for small breeeds. Also, never use a bark collar on your dog if his barking is the result of separation anxiety, or other fears or phobias. Punishment will only make these behaviors worse.

Citronella Bark Collar: “This bark collar is considered the most humane, and contains a spray can filled with a citronella solution that sprays into your dog’s face every time he barks. The citronella bark collar is also reported to be the most successful type of anti-bark collar. Dogs find the scent of citronella very unpleasant, but the spray won’t reach their eyes or burn their skin. Dogs wearing a citronella-based bark collar soon make the connection between loud barking and a dose of foul-smelling spray.”

Ultrasonic Bark Collar: “This collar emits a high-frequency sound when your dog barks. To the dog, this is similar to you shouting at your dog for correction. Unfortunately, dogs can become accustomed to extraneous sounds and simply ignore it. Of the three most common bark collar methods, ultrasonic sound is considered to be the least effective.”

The 3rd type of bark collar, better for large breeds but not our favorite, is the Electric Shock Bark Collar.

Electric Shock Bark Collar: “This is probably the most controversial form of bark collar sold today, and we don’t recommend it to control your dog’s barking. An electrical charge is led to a set of metal probes on the collar itself. You can adjust the level of stimulus from 1 to 10, starting with the lowest setting that your dog will respond to. The shock is about the equivalent of a human touching a doorknob after walking across a carpet. The electricity stings momentarily, stopping the unwanted barking and conditioning the dog to modify their behavior. The electric shock is painful to your dog but many dogs will choose to endure the pain and continue barking.”

To read this article in full please click on the link below:

http://ezpuppytraining.com/puppy-behavior/dog-bark-collar

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