Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Teaching dog commands?

How can I teach my dog how to stay and to not jump and come without buying any of that dog training stuff. He knows how to sit fine but sometimes he just gets out of control and doesnt come when I ask him to. PLEASE HELP!

Cooperative Tips on Dog Training



Recommended Answer:
Be consistent and use a leash when training. To teach your dog to come, have your dog sit. Then hold a treat, call your dog, give a tug on the leash and say "__dog's name__, come". Give the treat.

Keep doing this until he gets it off the leash. Then go outside, romp and play with your dog. Call your dog and treat. Keep calling your dog to give him a treat until he knows his name and to come. Do this repeatedly for days and weeks until he is reliable.

Then play the game with somebody else. Between the two of you, take turns calling the dog over and giving him a treat.

To keep him from jumping, first teach your dog to sit with treats. Every time he jumps say "sit" and treat him for sitting. Or you could do the same thing and teach him to lie down when he jumps. First teach him to lie down with treats.

Understanding The Concept of Dog Training


  • Ask your dog to sit. With you at his side take the palm of your hand opposite him and slowly swing down and stop with the palm of your hand in front of his nose and say clearly and seriously "STAY". Step forward one step and stop count one second then step back. When you are back beside him lean over and say "Good boy" then give him a tiny treat. One only. Of course he may not stay the first time and you will have to put him back. Don't play around with him. If he steps out of his sit/stay say "No" loud and clear and push him back. That's why you start with only one step. Once in a while when he does as you ask go back to him and say Good boy and give him like ten treats in a row. BUT only do that once in awhile. When you finish each stay let him know he's done with that practice by saying OK then walk him around and practice heel. This will take a while, stop, sit, palm to nose, stay, step away, count one second then return, Goodboy,treat, ok, heel.
    If you are under 19 you can go to your local cooperative extension and see the youth agent there, they can tell you whether they have a 4-H dog project or a knowledgeable person to help you and it won't cost you anything. Practice makes perfect and you'll be surprised how smart your dog gets after you practice awhile.
    When your dog finds that you are spending more time playing with him he will come more eagerly when he is called. Remember don't call your dog to you to punish him. If he gets punished when he comes to you then he learns quickly to run the other way. If you feel he's running away after something you have to be more fun and interesting than what he is after. Turn around and call in an excited voice and run in the opposite direction. He will come to see what's got you so excited.

  • Consistency and patience. Keep reenforcing the commands. As far as the come one, train on long leash and make it fun. The command should have a pleasant sound to it - not a "come here and you will be punished". Never ever tell a dog to come to you and then punish them for being bad for something else. That only teaches the dog that coming to you will be a bad thing - not a good thing.

    And if you are still having problems, then sign up for a course of basic obedience to help you train.

  • The only dog training "stuff" you ever need is a leash and a collar.
    Put the dog on a sit, tell him in a firm voice "stay" and curl around right in front of him. if he moves, a firm "no", put him back in a sit, and repeat the stay command. Make him stay for 15-20 seconds, then return to his side. NEVER let the dog out of a stay by just letting him get up - always return to him, then praise him while he is sitting. Each time you do this, make the time a few seconds longer. Once he is staying regularly, then put some distance between you and the dog. The most critical thing is consistency - and be quick to react if the dog gets up - the sooner the correction, the more effective it will be.
    Jumping - as soon as you see the dog start to jump, grab his collar (or leash if he is wearing it), a quick firm snap towards the ground, and a firm "off" command. Never allow him to actually touch what he wants to jump on, whether it is a person, another dog, or a piece of furniture. If he is not allowed to reach it, he will give up trying.
    If he is jumping on people, put him in a sit/stay, and have the person approach him to pet him. If the dog gets up, have the person back away from him, put him back on a sit stay and have the person approach again. do not let the person touch him unless he is sitting.
    For a recall, again, always on leash. Allow the dog to the end of the leash, then call his name and command "come". As soon as you do this, gently tug on the leash to encourage him to come to you. If he does not respond, then literally pull him in towards you. However, as you are doing this, make a lot of high pitched praises - make it fun for the dog to come to you. Never call the dog to punish him or for something he does not like. always praise him and make a big fuss when he comes to you.
    A basic obedience class will help tremendously here. I would recommend checking out classes in your area, see how they train, and find somewhere that you can agree with their methods.
    Personally, I do not use treats to train my dogs. I have found in over 20 years as a trainer that dogs listen perfectly until the treats are gone, and then they may listen half the time, if that. Use your voice for commands and your voice and hands for praise - you always have those with you.

  • what i did i just held my hand out when he was sitting and said stay, when he didnt i put him bacc in the same position and repeated my actions, basically everytime he moved i did the same thing....it doesnt take long at all he got it within about 5 trys, i also used treats as a reward for listening, he understood thats what i wanted him to do. i havent mastered the not jumping thing though, he just gets so excited. teaching it to come should be taught after it has learned to stay. do the same thing and reward treats.

  • What breed of dog is it?
    1. you should take him on a walk before you start a training session with him. That will keep his energy down and he can focus.
    2. command him to sit
    3. once he sits praise him quietly so he doesn't get hyper
    4. put your hand out flat like your going to give someone a high five walk a few feet away, command him to stay
    5. if he stays praise him
    6. every time you do this and he succeeds walk away further

  • you have to be strict with him and when he jumps punish him or turn around and don't make eye contact with him for a little bit. by punishing him put him in a place that he is afraid of or that he doesn't but when he does jump use a word to let him know that he is doing something bad (preferably not no, try ah-ah in a short, sharp, and loud voice/tone ). When he does as told reward him with a treat and praise a lot (praise is like a vocal reward, like saying good boy or stuff like that)

  • A trained dog is a better behaved dog. Training reaches the dog and the owner. Use a treat with the come command. To teach stay you need to work with him. If he gets up before he is supposed to, repeat until he does stay. Repetition is how dog training works.

  • well what i do is just go to the fridge and get some ham eat it in front of them then pretend like you still have some and tell them the commands until they do this it always works for me i taught my dog to sit stay and come and jump just by doing the ham trick

  • oh just use a treat.
    dont give it to him if he moves when you put your hand out in a halt gesture. have him stay for a small bit of time then call him and give him the treat. increase the stay time with every treat you give.

  • i had a lot of trouble in that area with my dog. this video helped me out alot. its amazing

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yu_moia-o…

  • Try treats, clickers,anything he likes to reward him! but some times you really have to disclipene your dog to get it to behave!

  • just keep practicing thats what my friend did and now her dog does nearly all her commands.

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