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Dog Training Forum Dog Training Forums - Do you go to dog training classes? Do you self-train your dog? Share with other readers what dog training techniques work for you.
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Old 08-20-2007, 02:29 AM   #1
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I need some advice, which is best to undergo training?

I have read about dog obedience training, home dog training and lots of dog training advice. So, right now I’m ready to perform all the information I’ve learn. Still I don’t have a dog yet but I’m planning to buy one. Now, can someone advise me what is the perfect dog that can be easily trained? Should I buy a puppy or an adult dog already just for my training convenience anyway?
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Old 08-20-2007, 02:48 AM   #2
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Re: I need some advice, which is best to undergo training?

The choice of breed and age rest mainly on your lifestyle. How much free time do you have? Do you have a yard or nearby park? How much time are you willing to give for the dog's exercise? Do you live in an apartment or house? Do you rent or own? Do you have kids...and on and on. There are so many things that need to be answered before anyone could hazard a guess as to the proper breed for you.

Even then breed advice is a touchy matter. Often people don't like giving suggestions because it gets someone hung up on that one breed or turns them away from others. The best way to find the right dog for you is through lots and LOTS of personal research. Start by looking through the websites dedicated to some of the breeds that interest you. Most breed clubs (or parent clubs) have a site that provides a ton of info to would-be owners.

I myself have most breed clubs bookmarked so if you need a step in the right direction let me know and I would be happy to post the URL for you.
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Old 08-20-2007, 03:23 AM   #3
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Re: I need some advice, which is best to undergo training?

Speaking of free time I can tell that I have plenty of it. That’s why I need something to make myself busy, a recreation I should say. My backyard is wide enough to accommodate a number of dogs.
Yes, I’m interested with what you have said. Can you post the URL? Another thing is I’m not really familiar with the equipments to be used during the training could you tell me more about it?
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Old 08-20-2007, 04:24 AM   #4
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Re: I need some advice, which is best to undergo training?

Training at Home
Putting Together a 5-minute Training Session

Training Tips

Much of the training you do at home will occur during every day interactions with your dog. For example, when your dog jumps up, you should turn your back, fold your arms and reward him with attention only when all four of his feet are on the floor. Be conscious of all your interactions with your dog! Make an effort to reward behavior you like and avoid rewarding behavior you don’t like.

In addition, devoting a few minutes a day to a training session is invaluable. Many of the techniques we are teaching in class require you to develop new skills, such as timing, reading your dog and simultaneously juggling clicker, treats and leash. The ultimate goal, besides a better-behaved dog, is for you and your dog to learn to communicate effectively. Training sessions allow you and your dog to focus exclusively on each other. For this week, try to build a habit of at least one short training session per day.

Rules for training at home:

* One trainer and one dog at a time.

* Be prepared. Have your rewards, such as soft stinky treats, ready and decide what you are going to work on before you begin.

* Set your dog up to win. Progress comes from building on successes.

* If your dog is not “getting it,” change something you are doing.

* Keep it short, keep it happy and always end on a high note.

A session that ends with both of you happy is a successful session!

Putting Together a 5-minute Training Session
How to get started:

* Find a place to train where you and your dog can be alone. Spectators are allowed only if they promise to sit down and be quiet. Other dogs in your home should wait their turn outside the training area.

* Get your treats ready. Positive reinforcement methods require positive reinforcements. Treats should be small, soft and something your dog is willing to work for. You can put treats in a bowl on a table, put them in your pocket or in a fanny pack.

* Pick a few behaviors to work on before you begin and decide what you will click for. Help your dog choose the behavior you want, by luring or by limiting his choices, and reward him when he gets it right. He can’t succeed if you’re not clear in your own mind on what you want. On the other hand, be ready to ask for an easier behavior if your lure fails or if he never offers the behavior you have in mind. For your next training session, pick different behaviors to work on. This keeps it interesting for both you and your dog. Avoid making training sessions into repetitive exercise drills.

* Set your dog up to win. Click and treat frequently to keep your dog in the game; the learning comes when he is getting it right. If you do not get an opportunity to click and treat within 30 seconds or a minute, ask for an easier behavior. Then assess what is wrong (see below) and try to fix it. Repeated failures, such as when your dog is not responding to your first cue, may establish a pattern in the dog’s mind of behavior you don’t want.

* Keep it short, keep it happy and always end on a high note. A good training session has a beginning, a middle and an end. Begin with a few easy behaviors your dog already knows, so you can give a few clicks and treats right away. Then spend a few minutes on learning a new behavior or improving an old one. End the session on a success – go back to a known behavior if you need to – then give a big reward and let your dog know the session is over. Following a training session with play, a meal or a walk is a nice plus.

The whole session may last less than 5 minutes - don’t keep going so long that your dog loses interest in the game. A tiny amount of progress in any individual session is all you need. Add up all the tiny steps and you will soon see very big changes.

If you are getting frustrated, try again later. Continuing will do more harm than good. What is most important is that both you and your dog enjoy the process, so you are motivated to train again the next day.

* Having problems? Does your dog seem anxious, confused or disinterested?

If anxious, don’t lean over your dog, use a softer tone of voice and don’t gesture or click right in his face.

If confused, make sure you click precisely when you see the behavior you want and that you click for the same behavior each time.

If disinterested, try better treats or a place with fewer distractions. Another possibility is that you need to improve your timing. Once your dog understands this is a game worth winning, he will be interested.


Article courtesy of Dumb Friends League
Reproduced by permission
www.ddfl.org - All Rights Reserved.
www.opentip.com - Dog Training Product.
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Old 08-20-2007, 11:46 AM   #5
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Re: I need some advice, which is best to undergo training?

Quote:
Originally Posted by mary_mjc View Post
Speaking of free time I can tell that I have plenty of it. That’s why I need something to make myself busy, a recreation I should say. My backyard is wide enough to accommodate a number of dogs.
Yes, I’m interested with what you have said. Can you post the URL? Another thing is I’m not really familiar with the equipments to be used during the training could you tell me more about it?
I ment I would post the URL to a breed club you were interested in. I'd have to know the breed first
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Old 08-21-2007, 04:32 PM   #6
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Re: I need some advice, which is best to undergo training?

Many new puppy owner make MOST of their mistakes from day one. For example: You have this most adorable little 5 pound puppy. He loves to jump on you, lick your face and nibble your ear. You just love it and him to death. He greets you at the door running and jumping and you pick him up and kiss his beautiful little face. Now fast forward two months. You have this cute but not so little 25 pound dog who still loves to jump on you, lick your face and nibble your ear, and now grab your pants legs. You still love him to death but hate the scratches down your side and back and the mark he is leaving on your hands. Now you say, NO!! That same dog greets you at the door running and jumping but now you don’t pick him up and kiss his beautiful little face, you shove him down and tell him NO! The whole time he thinks you’re just playing with him but your NOT, you are now mad and frustrated – after all he doesn’t know what NO means, he is a DOG!!

Most people who do not take on training early always seem to seek advice about the big three behaviors all the time: The same behaviors that at one time was acceptable.

1. Oral behaviors - puppy nipping & chewing
2. Jumping Up
3. Pulling on leash

These are the behaviors best dealt with at an early age, and the ones that vets, trainers, pet supply store owners, TV personalities, and groomers, sadly, often spew the most misinformation about. Newbies hear things like, "Say 'No' and hold his mouth shut", "Knee in the chest", and "Give him a leash correction", and of course, the all important dominance and pack leader theories all the time. Some of the theories have merit, but it is often misapplied by clumsy humans trying to mimic dogs, wolves, or other humans. Puppy training is both simpler, easier, and at the same time harder than that. When raising human babies, people expect to have to repeat themselves, or wait for the child's maturity to catch up when learning new tasks (you don't all hold the forks the same way now as you did when you were two, right?)
Dogs are somehow expected to "get it" right away and be "obedient". If people would just think of training as a process, life would be easier for them, and for the puppies.
The following links might be of some help to new puppy owners who just want to understand, not make mistakes, and have a well behaved puppy that is also a happy puppy and, later, a happy, obedient family companion.
http://www.diamondsintheruff.com/Dev...talStages.html
http://www.petloveshack.com/ClickerTraining.html
http://www.dog.com/search.asp
www.clickerlessons.com
http://www.clickersolutions.com/arti...ndex.htm#puppy
It is not necessary to punish puppies to have them respond to training and be well behaved. The best way to deal with leash pulling is to prevent it in the first place, since it is a particularly hard behavior to extinguish once it is established.
http://www.clickertraining.tv/produc...=KPDLVD110R-06
The way toward leadership does not have to be paved with corrections, or with misguided notions about the pack. Your puppy, even at his tender young age, knows you are not a dog. But, he can discover that you are a leader, since you control all the good stuff he wants!
http://www.r-plusdogtraining.info/guide.htm
http://www.diamondsintheruff.com/whisperer.html
And, as your pup grows, you need to keep up with behavioral training:
http://www.diamondsintheruff.com/behavior.html
The best possible thing you can do for any pup is to prevent unwanted behavior (mostly by seeing that the pup gets no reward for it - practice ignoring, not speaking, and turning away - that's how dogs do it); supervising them and managing their environment (the food doesn't stay on the floor all day until the pup thinks he is master of the universe and can eat when he darn well pleases); and exercise (a tired pup with his tongue lolling on the floor is less apt to nibble on your pant leg). Early socialization with other puppies and humans is essential (the optimum socialization window is between the ages of 8-12 weeks - already closed if you take the advice of many who say that the pup has to be fully immunized before starting class, or the instructors who run classes with everyone on leash).
http://www.diamondsintheruff.com/ear...alization.html

Happy puppy raising!
http://www.diamondsintheruff.com/behavior.html

Implementing NILIF is a great program to use with all your training.
http://www.k9deb.com/nilif.htm
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