Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Dog Health Questions: How to teach my dog to do this?

Is it possible to train difficult dogs? My dog is friendly, loving, lovable and a great companion. But even by taking her to dog training classes she has always failed to learn any commands. We love her but it's quite obvious she is pretty stupid lol.
Finally I taught her to sit and I know when I say certain things she understands. Like if I say "walk" she runs and hides because she doesn't like being walked. If I'm talking and say "I'm going to bed" she immediately runs down to bed. If I say "Mum" in a sentence she looks at my mum. If I say "Lauren" in a sentence she look at my sister. So it has become obvious she is not quite as stupid as she seems. She is very stubborn and it is impossible to even force her to lie down or touch her paws or roll over. She's only a very small breed of dog and would never dream of hurting anyone but she resists so hard it's just impossible and I don;t want to hurt her. So I want to teach her stuff like how to shut a door, how to jump up onto stuff like a sofa for EXAMPLE.
How do I go about doing this?
Thanks

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What appears as stubborness or stupidity is actually fear. I bet if you used a more gentle tone as cue rather than a command, she would respond better, once she learns not to be afraid of you.

Learning new things in a class full of other dogs can be very intimidating for a dog, espcially one that not accustomed to being in that environement. What that tells me about your dog is that she is out of her comfort level and can't learn, not that she is dumb. Think of a situation where you walked into a room full of strange people, and you felt like they were watching you. Were you able to learn or even perfom something uo already know?

The fact she is afraid of her walks says that she is over threshold for her fear level when she is in that environment.

Dogs that 'freeze' or stop doing anything, refuse behaviors, avoid eye contact, yawn, stretch, turn their head away, or eyes glaze over when you give a command are afraid. Turid Rugaas wrote a book that will help you learn what your dog is communicating to you. It's called "On Talking Terms with Dogs: Calming Signals." You can oder it throguh www.dogwise.com . It's a little book and cheap.

By offering thse behaviors the dog is trying to calm you down in a situation she feels is stressful. When it doesn't work and you talk louder, or keep insisiting she does a behavior, she offers more calming signals in an effort to avoid confrontation. So the cycle escalates.

I'd be interested to know why you think clicker training won't work for her. I think it might be the best thing as it is a hands off training where the dog learns to offer behaviors with no threat of punishment. The communication is very clear "Yes! you did that correctly-and you get a treat for doing so!" And you don't have to actually use a clicker, you can use a marker word like "Yes!" instead.

If she doesn't like treats, it tells me you need to try harder to find something she likes. Cooked liver bits? Bits of hard mild cheese? Cooked chicken bits? I have not yet met a dog that didn't like all of these, even the fussy ones! You can use these to motivate her to learn new things.

Here is a free online training program that teaches you how to train yuor dog and along the way, she'll learn behaviors she needs to be a great family dog.
http://www.dragonflyllama.com/%20DOGS/%2…

I wish I lived closer or I would help you learn how to communicate with and train your dog.

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  • I have a Pitty mixed and he was so stubborn and strong willed it was ridiculous..give her activities that would make her interested and reward her with treats she should catch on. No dog is to difficult to train if given the right amount of time and dedication into their training.

  • It sounds like you just haven't found a training method that works for her - I suggest looking into clicker training.

  • I know some dogs that are difficult to train and it's assumed they're stupid when they can actually be very, very smart. If you have a smart dog it just may take a little more to train her. Try different training methods. Maybe she needs more training then your average dog or maybe she just needs to be more mentally challenged. But all dogs can be trained.

  • treats or the best way plus dvd on learning just don't over treat them but no he may be difficult but he is still trainable

  • If my puppy is not responding to training, I don't blame the puppy, I reevaluate myself. If my puppy is not responding to commands, I change them. Each of my dogs has different words, sounds, hand signals they respond to, so if one is not responding, I just keep running down words or sounds or hand signals until I see what that puppy is responding to. There is no law that says you have to use come, sit, stay, if your dog sits when you say popcorn, then use popcorn. We have doggie stairs, probably bought at walmart of a pet store so our puppies can get on the bed and one for the couch. I think we put a puppy treat on each step until they learned to climb up them. I think you need to just practice with her to find what she responds to. One of my dogs I used signs from sing language, his daughter, I used thumbs up for things I wanted her to do, and I shook my finger at her like I was scolding for things I didn't want her to do. You just have to reevaluate yourself and find what she responds to and run with that.

  • yeah, i've the same problem as you do,
    but since i get dog personal trainer,
    i don't have any problem again with that.
    source :
    www.training-dog.co.cc

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