Showing posts with label dog training kits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dog training kits. Show all posts

Friday, October 19, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Question about my dog?

Hello All,

I have a 3yr Pit Bull named Indika. I got her when she was 6 weeks old from just some guy selling them. I fall in love with her when I saw her, she stood out from the rest. When she was younger she was pretty much like a normal puppy expect that she seemed a little more timid than most. As the years went by its gotten worse. Now she is terrrified of loud noises, and people. Shes only really is ok around me. In my home it consists of myself, my boyfriend (who has been in her life for about a yr now) and my youger brother (17yrs old) and Honey, our little Yorkie who is 6 months old. Now Indika does well with other dogs-male or female. I haven't had her around any other bigger female dogs though. However with Honey she is so amazing & motherly and patient. With children she is terrified of them, she has never ever snapped at a child or anyone but she shakes really bad when anyone new is around or petting her. The only time I have noticed she is ok and doesn't shake is when the person is really calm and actually ignores her.

I love my dog so much and it really breaks my heart to see how scared she is. She is so apart of me and my family and it hurts me to see her go through this. I was thinking about putting her through some dog training. Do you think that will help her or no? Or will that remain to be her ways forever? In some desperate need of ideas, suggestions, advice?

Thanks!

Aggressive Dog Training - Expert Advice



Recommended Answer:
needs training and socialization
yes a class or more should help her.
not if you really work on helping her

Schutzhund Dog Training - The Highest Level of Dog Training


  • You got a poorly bred pit bull puppy at 6 weeks! No wonder it has problems. Honestly you can try a trainer or behaviorist but it could just be her personality.
Read More...

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Dog Health Questions: How do I handle a 2 year old dog growling at his food bowl?

My dog is a labradoodle and we have had him since he was a puppy. Since he was a puppy, when we put down the food, we keep our hands in the bowl for a few minutes and we never had a problem. Now he is 2 years old and for the past few months, he has gotten very aggressive with his food bowl. We feed him once a day. He is about 70lbs, so he never skips a meal. I really dont know why this is happening but we have small children that cant go near him if he is eating. Can anyone suggest what to do besides paying for expensive dog training?

5 Tips to Choose Effective Dog Training Courses



Recommended Answer:
The basic concept for him is that he doesn't want his food messed with, just like if the waiter stayed by you while you ate and would reach out to your plate (me personally, would probably stab them with my fork... lol).
I would say when you feed him start by placing a few pieces of kibble in his bowl, then place a few more and so on, just so he can see that when your hand reaches for the bowl food goes in and it has a good association.

You may also wanna put him up to 2 meals a day, he may be trying to protect his plate because he knows it will be the only one he gets that day,

Basic Dog Training Commands


  • u shood feed him 2 times a day...hes is soo hungry from only one meal that he thinks that u will steal his food so he gets agressive....he shood have two big meals a day...breakfast and dinner

  • Your dog is probably feeling territorial. Have you considered having him fixed?

    You need to give him a smack when he growls at your hand when you put it in his food bowl. Not a hard smack but hard enough to let him know what he did was wrong and that if he does it again the consequences will be bigger.

  • Leave food down for him around the clock and put another bowl down also. After a few weeks if this doesn't help, try hand feeding him only. He can't possess it then. This is what trainers have told me to do for food possession.

  • maybe you could have your dog sit infront of his bowl. give him a treat and pet him. then you could put a treat in his bowl and pet him. after a couple treats in the bowl and petting him while he eats them without any aggression try feeding him his food with the same technique (from hand and petting then little at a time in bowl while petting). You could also try putting him on a leash and do this and every time he shows signs of aggression tug on the leash, have him sit, and strongly tell him no

  • Feed him twice a day...away from everyone and everything. If this behavior does not stop, you'll need to consult your vet. Food aggression can get very ugly...and dangerous for your children. Think about it. kjl

  • My niebors dog is like that. It dosnt matter what breed, cuz hes is a shih tzu.

    Its somthing they do natraully if not trained bout it.

    Its just trying to point out "hey buddy my food, get lost".

    so one easy solution is getting him fixed.
    calms down a dogs temper by ALOT, trust me it works!

  • Hes Having territorial Issues so You Might want to stay away

  • Eating once a day isnt enought for a dog one heavy meal is too hard on the stomach feed your dog in the morning and at night

  • Get a baby gate and gate him in the kitchen or wherever you feed him.Keep the children out of that room during this time.
    I hope this does not start moving to toys, etc. and just stays with the food. Is this dog allowed on the furniture? If so, do not allow that. He should never be higher than your kids, meaning they do not sit on the floor with the dog.
Read More...

Monday, July 2, 2012

Dog Health Questions: I want to start my own pet buisness. What should I do to start?

It's going to be a buisness of dog-training, dog & cat grooming, pet boarding, animal rescuing, and fish, birds & reptile sales. I'm planning on getting a professional dog-training cerficate within a year. What else should I do? Where do I start? Any advice would be helpful. Thanks!

Dog Treats for Dog Training



Recommended Answer:
After getting your certificate, use it to earn as much money as possible doing your own private thing. After saving up a lot of money, lease out a decent-sized building and turn that into a buisness! Ask for help and support from trusted friends and family if you really need it. Also, lots of experience is best!

Old Fashioned Dog Training


  • That sounds pretty hard but if you aren't going to do it where ever you live and you don't have somewhere to do it I would suggest trying to get a place to buy for it but you will have to save up it is pretty pricey. Just save up for ALOT of supplies and everything. Make a website when you have almost everything done. You need employees unless your just going to do it yourself. Start small and build up. Try to look up some dog styles for grooming buy some books maybe or look on the internet or just go to other groomer places and ask for some tips. You will need everything you got to do this it is a pretty big thing ya know. I hope I helped and I wish you luck! Maybe I will actually visit your place if you get it doing because my dog Harley is filthy and he needs a good groomer. Good Luck!!! ^_^

  • start out small i personally believe your trying to start out way to big, do you have certifications in grooming? how many years of experience, how would you deal with a lice out break brought into your shop if you plan on grooming? getting an IPG cert would be a start for the grooming, and keep in mind, if your grooming and its only you, you have to be able to do them fast enough to make pay for your supplies and your time if you plan on making money from it. if you had outside groomers, what would your requirements be? how are you figuring their wages? half of what ever the shop charges is average "wages"

  • just what ever u do don't gety your birds and repitles from mills such as rainbow exoitic pet
Read More...

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Dog training?

So, I'm going to start training my siberian husky for urban mushing. (He is around three years.) I've already started with the "On By" command during daily walks. Are there any mushers out there that could give me a few tips about training for urban mushing? Mostly with the directional comands, but tips on all of it would be great! :]Thanks!

A Beginner's Guide to Dog Training



Recommended Answer:
Do this first - Crate Training and Obedience Training. Then you can do the other basic commands.

Dog Training - How NOT To Train Your Dog


    Read More...

    Friday, May 25, 2012

    Dog Health Questions: Dog training problem of a different sort...?

    My dogs may not be the best behaved lot around, but they do listen to me. I say "Get in the pen!" and they get in the pen. My problem is my husband. They won't listen to him at all. He'll say "Go on, get in the pen" and they look at him and run off. I know the issue is the husband. How do I get him to show some dominance to them? They think he's around to pass out treats and love.

    Dog Training Bumpers and Dummies



    Recommended Answer:
    I've always found spouses to be harder to train then the dogs. Sadly I haven't found a means to where spouse training has been successful on so many levels. an option that may or may not work is to enroll him and one of the dogs in a good local obedience class. I find spouses, like children take direction better from someone outside the house hold.

    I don't believe in dominance theory. I feel that obedience is a part of respect on both sides. Dogs respect their owners because their owners respect them and train them appropriately.

    Dog Training Fundamentals - 5 Key Dog Behaviour Factors That Affect Training


    • He doesn't need to prove he is more dominant.. he needs to earn their respect.Respect is gained through leadership, not being demanding. He needs to find activities in which the dogs need to look to him for guidance, eg a beginners agility class. Walking also helps strengthen the bond between them, so he should start walking them individually, on a daily basis. He should spend no less than 15 minutes per day (per dog) training them with positive reinforcement techniques (think sophia yin's techniques)

      I think both you and he would benefit from reading the article on this page, and the links on here are good as well..

      http://drsophiayin.com/philosophy/domina…

    • Sometimes I understand where your husband is coming from re: computers. I have the same problem, and though my husband might not agree to it, I would suggest finding a obedience class. PetCo and a few other pet shops have them in the summer. I could be good since the instructor can be a mediator for the two of you. Our problem is the closest one is over 200 miles away and we only to into town once a month for our groceries. Can't take our girl since it would not be fair to leave her in the car while we shop. Anyway, try suggesting that say to see if the trainer could give pointers on dog handling. Be sure though that you approach it where he doesn't go on the offensive. Men tend to do that when the wife suggests something he might be doing wrong.

    • Well, to start with, he has to start being consistent in following your example. Treats are for special instances. Our dog gets Dogsters, but only if she finishes her dinner.

      When she wants a treat, from either of us, she has to earn it. We both do that so she knows that I am the alpha and my wife is the Omega.

      In your case, the husband may need to work on a command voice with the dogs. It isn't easy, but it needs to be done.

      And you need to help him in that respect, by showing the dogs that he is alpha and you are Omega (Pack leader and mate).

    • If he was worried about it he would/should have posted this question. The thing is, he needs to invest time and effort in the training, but it will only work if he wants to change the situation. You cant make him do anything, it has to be something he wants to do.
    Read More...

    Tuesday, February 21, 2012

    Dog Health Questions: Don Sullivan's the Perfect Dog training system??

    I am anticipating purchasing this training system but am a little skeptical. I was wondering if anyone knew from experience if this is just another informercial scam or if it worked?

    Small Dog Training - Searching For Dog Training Courses Online?



    Recommended Answer:
    I don't have it but thinking of getting it myself. I heard from couple of people that it does work, some people seen results in their dogs the next day, it very helpful for dogs that don't want to listen to you unless there is a treat in your hand, which is perfect for my dog. LOL I heard that's what his training method is. He teaches you how to make your dog listen to you without treats, and I think he uses traditional training with positive but i'm not sure on that.

    Dog Training Collar


    • I haven't heard of it before. I have tried several systems before and most of them were complete junk. They were basically rehashed info that you can find for free online. I did find one system that worked for me. It couldn't of come at a better time. I was about ready to give my dog away!!

    • It looks like another scam to me. If it sounds to good to be true, then it likely is.
    Read More...

    Sunday, November 27, 2011

    Dog Health Questions: As dog training is so variable... do the techniques also vary depending on circumstances?

    I would like to know if your methods or ethics with dog training would change under the following circumstances to get the dog trained...

    - If you are training a dog for someone else.
    - If you have a time limit of a few weeks to fully train a dog.
    - If you are training a dog with no motivation or drive that can be worked with to a level that could be used for training.

    Inspired by this question;
    http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;…

    4 Tips To Be Succesful In Dog Training Biting



    Recommended Answer:
    You know Jen...this is one of my pet peeves in the dog world and training...people that have little to no knowledge that talk. Where did your headline come from..how was it inspired? I am not accusing you of making this up, but, here is the deal...

    Dog training is NOT variable, there is only ONE way to train dogs, the ONLY thing that varies is the amount of corrections and their intensity, period.
    Dog training is about repetition and consistency, doing it over and over and creating a habit along with rewards and corrections.
    Do you know why we have all this BS you hear today about all these different methods of training?
    I will tell you because I have been around long enough to experience it...ready...Its because we have pathetic excuses for dogs anymore, dogs that should never have been bred, allowed to live or train for anything. See, because of the pussyfication of these dogs, we HAD to create newer, gentler crap training methods that would fit these dogs temperaments, even though these dogs are not worth the chow they eat.

    Example...in Holland, the KNPV has existed for 100 years, it is the main sport in which they train their dogs in. If you want to compete in that sport, you have to have a dog that can do it, all of it, the entire program. They will NOT modify a program that is 100 years old to accommodate your dog and they should not.
    Same thing in Belgium, NVBK is it and your dog better have what it takes to participate in the world's hardest training program or you are out, they wont change it around to fit your dog.

    My ethics remain the same today as they were 31 years a go, I am still a believer of real training that works. Yes, I do get to choose the dogs I invest my time in, yes, I also get to modify my corrections according to each dog's temperament, but, I refuse to work with dogs of questionable or non existent drives and temperaments.
    If I am training a dog for someone else, I don't have 4 years to teach basic OB, I have a TIGHT schedule to adhere to, contracts signed that spell out VERY specifically when the dog will be operational. If I refuse to do that, if I claim that I need 6 months to train a dog in something they know will take 6 weeks because I want to train the dog in any particular way, I will lose the contract and the money and they will go somewhere else to get it done...that's not going to happen.

    I have 8 weeks to turn out a detection dogs and 8-10 weeks to turn out a patrol dog that may be cross trained, period. If I did my work right in selecting that dog, it WILL finish training in that frame of time, if not, I am screwed.
    I will not bother spending the time of day, not even a minute, on a dog that does not have the drives needed in the first place. Genetics always play the biggest role in selection of a proper dog for a particular job, no matter what anyone says.

    The bottom line here is that if dogs were STILL being bred how the were 50 years a go, if we did not spend all this energy trying to save every mutt born and all that nonsense, if we instead focused on reversing this down fall of our breeds and concentrate on bringing back what is left of these breeds, we would not need to sit here and discuss different training methods and being all PC and nice nice, we would be out there training instead. Hope I helped and I am SURE there will be additions coming...

    ADD: Ahh, yes, the HUGE range of opinions people have...of course...I see it now...yep, I got it...but, you know what I think about opinions..so, there is an expression that my redneck friends use down here when we hang out that I find very appropriate in cases like this...It says, "when the tail gate drops, the BS stops"...they are talking about their hunting dogs...ponder that for a while, then we talk again!!

    The Shocking Truth About Electronic Dog Training Collars


    • - If you are training a dog for someone else.

      My method will be to achieve a well trained dog by any means this is explained to the person and if they don't like it let them find someone that will cater to them and not the dog.
      - If you have a time limit of a few weeks to fully train a dog.

      Contrary to Cesar's methods dogs cannot be trained in a set amount of time, that depends on the dog.

      - If you are training a dog with no motivation or drive that can be worked with to a level that could be used for training

      HUH- Not sure what you mean, are you talking motivation in the dog or trainer? You train a dog in a method that compliments the personality/drive of that dog.

    • Training a dog for someone else:
      The way I train depends on what is most effective with the dog in question.
      So to me, it really doesn't matter *who's* dog it is. It matters what type of learner the dog is.

      Time Limit:
      This may effect the way I train as I would assume the sessions would become more frequent and more strenuous.

      No Motivation:
      I would try to find what, if anything, provides the most motivation for the dog and work from there. Be it treats, toys, corrections, or anything in between.I personally don't believe that there is a "one size fits all" training method. My beagle responded extremely well to clicker training when all else failed. But my Border Collie responds better to just about everything else I have tried.

    • Different methods work for different people...lots of trainers believe the way they train is the only way but who cares? I believe you need to do what works best for that specific dog and if it works for you why change it? Ive never used a prong or a choke, never felt the need yet, even with large breed dogs but if it works for someone else (as an aid, not a permanent solution) then so be it.

      ADD: I agree with Greek to a certain extent as well. Unfortunatley half the people in the real world cant handle a badly bred mutt so we'd be screwed if everyone had dogs bred to what they should be doing....thats why well bred Huskies, BC's, etc end up in shelters. the average pet owner doesnt have a clue about how to keep a real working dog happy. So I work with what I have and what I have is pet owners who want a well behaved dog. i do my best to provide that and to make sure that they realize that its more their job then the dogs. Cant save every dog or owner but you have to be realistic about what dogs are used for the majority of the time now.

      For someone else...same way Id work with my own dogs...whatever method they respond to best.

      Time limit....same just intensified, the dog will tell you when its too much.

      Motivation...all dogs have a motivation, you just have to find it...my BC would never work for treats, they just dont interest her, she want praise and thats all. Some dogs will do anything for a treat...again, varies by dog.

    • Greek gave a pretty thorough answer...
      I will just answer your questions directly based on my own personal preference I suppose.

      - If you are training a dog for someone else. - this wouldn't apply to me because I would never train someone else's dog for them. I am no dog trainer.

      - If you have a time limit of a few weeks to fully train a dog - there shouldn't really be a time limit on training dogs. Well, I mean there shouldn't be an excessive amount of time to train a dog, but I wouldn't say "3 weeks this dog better be trained". For instance my trainer in his OB programs, after an assessment he will decide if the dog should do 6 or 8 weeks. In Advanced OB you automatically do 8 weeks. I never have thought I needed any more time with him than that to be honest.

      - If you are training a dog with no motivation or drive that can be worked with to a level that could be used for training - can't any dog be trained?? To what degree with differ depending on the dog's motiviation and drive sure, but in my opinion, EVERY dog should be able to be trained in Basic OB.

      Every trainer has their own method. In my opinion, every GREAT trainer comes from the same background. Maybe they have tweaked their methods to an extent - but it should all be stemming from the same place.
      My trainer works with compulsion and corrections BUT he still uses treats when we are trying to get the dog to use his brain a little faster. Like a sit, stay, come and then the dog has to be right at your fit and drop into a sit - they work better for that with some positive motivation.
      The technique may differ depending on the dog as to how much complusion the dog needs (mine is stubborn and smart) and different tools for correcting.

      Sometimes when I try to explain this kind of stuff, it makes more sense in my head but comes out differently lol...hope that made sense.

    • I don't personally train other people's dogs. I train my own, but have a good knowledge of how it works sending a dog out for herding training, as I've considered doing this at some point with my own dogs.

      Based on these people that take in dogs for herding training, I don't see any difference in how they handle client dogs over their own. Training methods are the same across the board. Either the dog can do it, or it can't and the trainer will tell the client this if need be so as not to waste their money on training a dog that just won't cut it in the long haul.

      I have seen Border Collies, with no real talent for herding (they all have instinct, they don't all have real talent to be successful), trained to do the lower levels of AKC. Typically, these trainers are pattern training for something like A course. If a dog has enough obedience for the handler, then said handler can muddle their way through a title with this dog. Mind you that the top notch USBCHA trainers don't waste their time with these dogs. They know the dog is a fail for real work and they generally don't take your money just because they can, but there are trainers out there who will indeed do this.

    • It's hard for me to answer these training questions given my level of experience and my goals are so much different from everyone else's. But I want to participate. So.

      - The way I would train would be the way I would train, no matter whose dog it was.
      - Oddly enough this one is hard to answer. I've never been in control of how long a foster dog was with me. I' ve had dogs with me for 2 days and some for months. Sometimes the most I could do was get them to stop jumping on people and stop counter surfing. :) It's never been expected of me to fully train any dog.
      - My last dog was like that. My own dog that I adopted. The Lab/Shar Pei mix. (His nick name was "Sharpie." Add to his lack of motivation his extreme shyness and aloofness. Then on top of that constant illness that required vigilant home care. I learned a lot from him about veering from a one track training method. With him I ended up abandoning "training" altogether and went to what I guess would be called conditioning. First off, I established a strict routine. The exact same thing happened at the same exact time day in and day out, no matter the weather, the only exception being illness. And, wow, it was very difficult to do but I was militaristic about it. Around the routine I built little rituals, there was an order of things happening surrounding feeding time, play time, walks, bathroom breaks, everything that happened in his day to day had a ritual around it. This made a difference. He was a completely different dog after a week or two of this. After wasting so many months trying to "train" him, when I dropped training altogether and took a totally different approach to him, I saw real progress. Then training came a bit easier and he did learn quite a bit. Then he died and I'm sad, because I would have liked to have continued. He was a joyful challenge. (I'm sad for other reasons, too, but that's another post.)
    Read More...