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

Friday, September 21, 2012

Dog Health Questions: How should I train this dog?

I have a female chihuahua who is 2 years old. She is over all a very obedient well behaved dog except she is afraid of people (besides me) and if she can't get away from them she will bite at them. She barks at anything rather it be human or animal. I am the only person she will listen to and it has become an escalating problem. I can't afford dog training classes (partially because I am 16 and I don't have a job). Anything you can teach me to be able to handle and improve this situation would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. Also if it matters to anyone she is fixed and has been since she was very young, likely around the age of 6 months.

Off! How to Keep "Four on the Floor" - Basic Dog Training



Recommended Answer:
When she is around other people let her know it is a good thing by giving her treats and petting her, get her to sit and have an un familiar come in the room give her treats as they come closer say goood girl and eventually have them pet her 2, it may not happen over night u need to be patient and keep working at it, also if it is not working do not let her feel your frustration it only makes it worse, try to get her out into more public places, just walking around petsmart may help even if u don't buy anything. And always carry treats so when she does not bark at someone or let's them close to her u can let her know she did a good job!

Keeping Your Pet Dog Trained


  • You can train your dog. She is a fear biter, which means you have to very carefully isolate her and teach her to stay on one spot all her own. She may also need a crate. Since you cannot afford a trainer, how about a book. Call up a local trainer, tell them what is going on and ask for specific help, reading recommendations, and local resources. Hope this helps to get you started. Don't give up. Your dog can be trained.

  • watch "Its Me or the Dog" on Animal Planet. its a show about training dogs. the show give different ways on how to deal with all different types of problems*which is helpful because not every dog will respond to one type of training)

  • If you are taking him to obedience class they will teach you everything you need to know. When it comes to pulling on the lead, you stop and wait until the dog walks back to you, give them a treat and you start again. You may have to repeat but they will learn you are the leader not them. Obedience class helps you train your dog to come when called, work with him inside and if you have a yard with a fence outside as much as possible where there are distractions. Remember Praise and treat whenever they come! When it comes to the gerbil there is a thing called leave it you take a treat set it on the ground and say leave it if the dog goes near it cover it with your foot (don't smoosh it :) ) and say leave it again. Eventually your dog should walk away or sit down. when you move your foot to uncover it and he starts to go to it again repeat the proces again, Leave it! They will realize it is something they are not suppose to have and should give up on it completely. You praise and treat when they finally stop going for it :) When your dog has learned that if they go near the cage you say Leave it and they will walk away.
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Saturday, June 23, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Is it too late to get my dog trained?

He is about 7 months and lately since school started he has not been listening well at all. You can barely touch him without him attempting to bite. He used to listen phenomenally but lately he hasnt been listening and has been running away. Should we hire a trainer, take him to classes, or what!!??? Hellpppp. If he doesnt shape up i'm scared he wont be part of the family any more =\
Please Help Us!!!

Professional Dog Training Methods Revealed



Recommended Answer:
It is never too late to train a dog.

I would start with basic obedience classes - they are more reasonably priced, and the dog learns to listen to you regardless of distractions. Check with your local vet for anyone they recommend. Also, www.akc.org has a link to local clubs in the area that offer training classes.

Explain the situation up front when you call regarding class, and listen to what the trainer has to say. They may recommend a private trainer instead of a class situation - some class instructors do not like having "problem children" in the class, as they feel it is too great an interruption. However, I would search out a class that will allow the dog before spending the money on private lessons. (I do both class and private lessons, and feel a class situation is typically better for the majority of dogs).

Learn the Significance of Dog Training Courses


  • No, there is a saying, "You can always teach an old dog new tricks!"

    And I highly recomend consulting a personal trainer.

    Best of Luck to you!

  • It's never too late!
    We have a 3 year old Dal we rescued. He started school 2 weeks ago and we are already seeing results.
    The big part about obedience school is NOT training the dog, it's training the owner!

  • It's never too late. I adopted a 2 year old dog and trained her. Yes, a class with a professional trainer would help. Just training at home would help, too. Check out www.rewardingbehaviors.com for training tips and methods.

  • I would have told you to get an adult dog, since you can't be consistent with the puppy while you are gone for so long. Do the classes, and rearrange your life so you'll have time for him.

  • Training should never stop, try the classes and pay attention so you can continue training after, training is easy- it is repetition with praise when the end is acomplished

  • No, it's not too late. But it does sound like he may have learned some undesirable behaviors. My recommendation would be to locate a qualified trainer, and have them work with you directly. After that, you could, and probably should, consider classes.

  • You need to find a trainer I think, and make sure when he returns to you after running away that you are nice to him. Sounds silly but you need to make you and your home lovely to him, training collars work well or a tracking lead which is very long. The biting is aggression, maybe he is stressed and needs to be taught to be nice again. Find a local trainer.

  • it's never too late to train your dog. i think you should take him to classes to help with his biting and listening it might help with socializing too.

  • If hes biting then obedence classes help him know that your in charge. I would talk to a behavorilist. It cost me $75 but it was worth it. And its not to late tot take him. My dog was 2 years old when we finaly took him to a class. But its going to take time. its been 3 months and he's had a big change in him but hes not fully traiened.

  • You can def. teach an older dog new tricks. You have to remember, your dog is still a puppy. I have an 8 month old dog that is still mischievous but you just have to be patient and remember that you lead the dog, the dog doesn't lead you.
    training would definitely help, especially since it's still young.
    don't give up just yet...because as soon as you do, the dog does too!

  • I would definitely take him to classes. 7 months is not too old for training, I took my dog who was five years old. I would contact local shelters and ask their recommendations on where the best traning schools are in your area, they would know better than anyone else.

    Also, it sounds like there's something else going on here with your dog. If he used to be well-trained and now he is acting aggressively, I would take him to the vet to see if there isn't something that's bothering him and causing the change in temperment.

  • 7 months is when dogs get sort of stupid and are like crazy teenagers and when you need a class more than ever! Train this dog!
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Friday, May 4, 2012

Dog Health Questions: How do I politely tell my landlord to stop bugging me about my dog training methods?

My dog is almost 6 months old and at night and when NO one is physically in the house she is put in her crate. She is in the crate about 4 hours per day during the day when I'm at work. Otherwise she is out of the crate. She is a lab and for her safety I feel more secure knowing she is not getting into any trouble or chewing something she should not that is why she is put in the crate. I also have 3 cats and they are now just starting to adjust to the dog( we've had the dog for 2 1/2 months now). I walk my dog 3 times per day for 30 - 45 minutes each walk. She is allowed to run in the yard which I let her do. My landlord has said (not so nicely) that she thinks when someone is home the dog is in the crate which I have politely informed her the dog is only put in the crate when NO one is in the house. She also wants to know why I don't let my dog go to the doggie park. I have heard quite a few bad things about doggie parks and I would rather not have my dog go there. It's personal preference on my part. She also keeps telling me not to abuse the dog. I'm not abusing, neglecting or harming the dog in any way shape or form. During the hot weather we've had recently the dog (and cats) go in my daughters room where the A/C is and keep cool. How do I nicely tell my landlord to please let me raise the dog MY way? Her dog is misbehaved (jumps on people, doesn't listen at all) I'm trying to teach my dog NOT to jump on people, and my dog listens to me. Please no sarcastic responses.

Dog Training: What Is Dog Training?



Recommended Answer:
As a professional trainer my opinion on your training methods is you are doing the right thing. More so than many people do with their dogs when it comes to training, exercise and supervision. Keep doing exactly what you are doing.

As for you landlord's comments, at this point she has learned she can get a reaction out of you so it's worth it for her to continue her jabs. Many times people who have dogs that are out of control themselves are the first to accuse those with a well behaved dog of inappropriate behavior when it's really more of a cover up for their own shortcomings.

You know that you have done the right thing for your dog, and that you are the responsible one as far as the great life your dog is leading. She knows she has chaos in her life with her dog. Leave it at that. Let her live with her shortcomings simply by smiling, nodding and going on with a great life you have created for yourself and your dog. The true alpha or the one that is right is often times the quietest and the silence speaks much louder than the argument. :)

Control Your Aggressive Dog With These 4 Dog Training Tips


  • Not sarcastic, but this is really about your relationship with your landlord.

    I think you're doing the right thing...that's how we keep our dog when we are not home. She's probably lucky that her house is not being destroyed and should thank you for keeping the dog crated.

    As for telling her, its really up to you...not sure if I can help there

  • Your landlord sounds old fashioned and set in her ways so even though she means well she can get annoying. I bet if you were planting some flowers she'd come up to you and give you advice on how to water them even though you know perfectly well how to. I'd just try to ignore her as much as possible and if she wants to talk just tell her you're busy and walk away.

  • Tell her politely that you appreciate her opinion but you disagree then close the conversation. Say you do not want to discuss it anymore and you would like her to respect that. Then after that if she tries to talk about it with you politely excuse yourself. She can voice her opinion all she wants; you don't have to listen to it.

  • what you are doing sounds fine to me tell the landlord that you are following the advise of a professional trainer already and that is what you will continue to do it is really none of there but you also do not want to be rude good luck
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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Dog Health Questions: To older dog owners: What has changed with dog training, tools used to train and how dogs should be raised?

My grandma came to visit and she kept commenting how cruel dog crates are, how they never used them back then and how she can housetrain a dog well without the use of a crate. She also commented on how gentle leaders are rediculous and how they never existed back then either (we use one for when my dog goes to the shelter for play groups since metal/choke/prong collars are not allowed, otherwise we use a prong and sometimes choke chain) So i'm just curious, what has changed in the dog world? What are your opinions on the way it is now and how it was(on dogs, not the whole world)? Also, please don't think i'm trying to insult your age, i'm just curious!

Dog Training Problems - How to Eliminate Them and Get Good Results Training Your Dog



Recommended Answer:
HUGE changes in my lifetime.

40 plus years ago...?

If kids and dogs were naughty, they got smacked, no one thought anything of it.

Chokers were a REQUIREMENT at dog training classes, as were hard corrections where necessary.
If your dog needed a prong for you to hold it safely - You used one.
But mostly everyone only used either a flat collar or choker. They were your 2 choices.

Treats were not used in training class. Ever.
Dogs did as they were told because they had to, not because they got a treat.

Halters were for horses.
Harnesses were for horses pulling carts or sled dogs.

Dogs frequently roamed the streets, having a great time. No one thought much of it, so long as they stayed out of trouble.
If it attacked someone, or chased livestock. It was shot. End of story.

As a result dogs were usually 'well exercised', and slept when they got home, resulting in less neurotic behavioural issues.
(I am NOT suggesting it is advisable to allow your dog out to 'roam the neighbourhood', but I AM implying that many 'problems' people have with their dogs ARE purely as a result of lack of exercise and stimulation).

If a dog had temperament problems that were deemed dangerous.
It was usually shot or put to sleep.
This is because human/childrens lives were deemed more important than the dogs.
No risk was worth it and there were no "behaviouralists" to go to.

People didn't dress their dogs in clothes.

Dogs walked on the ground (sometimes even on lead!) and were never carried in hand bags.

There was no such thing as "poo bags".

If you wanted your dog to have a treat. You gave it a raw bone. Yum!
ALL dogs ate raw meat and bones. Everyone knew that fact.
This was because they are decended from carnivores/wolves.
No one EVER suggested differently.
Even slightly stinky old raw meat at the back of the fridge was usually deamed 'ok' to feed (again, I am not saying this was necessarily a good thing).
Salmonella was what humans got, if they ate old meat.

Dogs were always fed the house hold scraps (anything the dogs wouldn't eat went to the chooks).

Cooked bones, even back in the 70s, had some suspician regarding feeding them...
But you usually fed them anyway, because they loved them.
You stopped this practice only when your (or a dog you knew) died from bowel impaction/purforation.

Dogs were NEVER fed a vegetarian diet!
WTF?
This is because, it never occurred to anyone NOT to feed a carnivorous animal meat.
Just as it never occured to anyone to feed their cows or horses a meat based diet.

Most peoples dogs lived outside, not in the house.

There have been so many changes over the years.
Some subtle, some not.
Some for the better, some not.

But one things for sure, kids and dogs were better behaved back then.
I am not saying that makes the old methods right.
I am just sayin...

EDIT:
I nearly forgot!!
There were no computers and no internet, and no Yahoo Q&A to seek advice from.
Generally, if you had a problem, you asked someone OLD who had owned lots of dogs and had a lifetime of experience, OR you asked a vet.

Also there was no such things as "Designer Dogs".
Dogs were either purebred or mutts/mongrels.
Neither was thought of as 'better' than the other.
Each dog was judged on its own merits.

No one had ever heard of a "Teacup" dog.
If you wanted a really small dog, you got a Chihuahua or the like.

6 Step by Step Instructions For Dog Training Preparation


  • I'm not an older dog owner, but considering that my grandfather actually drowned all of the pups his dog gave birth to (except, for some reason, 2) I'd be inclined to say that dog training and ownership as a whole has gotten a lot softer.

    Which, in that case, is probably for a good thing...but for some training issues where corrections are desperately needed, it may not be as much of a good thing.

  • back in the olden days :O) dog food was bought at the grocery store ... dogs ate people food ... there were no crates or special training collars ... dogs were paper trained and hit with a rolled up newspaper to discipline ... i think it is better now ... my first dog was raised like the "olden days" and my current dog was raised with crate training, obedience classes, and the best food money could buy ... both dogs were great :O)

  • What has changed is peoples perception of dogs. Only 50 years ago dogs were mainly outside dogs, now that's considered abusive. Then dogs were companions with jobs to do like herd, protect, hunt, etc. Now they are members of our families sleeping in our beds with people names and people clothes.

  • I have been around dogs, on a pro level, for 32 years and I do very well remember the good old days.
    No, we did not have behaviorists, we did not have fancy foods, we did not have shampoos and all the other fancy crap. We DID have dogs that were A LOT harder and much more stable then what you have today. We had dogs that were a lot more handler hard that could actually work, we did not have many dogs living in the house, I never heard of that til I came to this country.

    We used chokers and long lines, we did have some crude E collars that could kill a dog, we did think that if a dog could not work, it should not live.
    In my opinion, we devolved as far as dogs and we have become much more soft in our ways and as a result of that, we have turned once great working dogs into oxygen thieves. Hope I helped.

  • With age comes knowledge and also being open minded. When I got my first show puppy, I was forced to buy a crate. You just can't go to shows without one really. What a learning experience that was for me. I have also used a shock collar for ONE of my fence jumping dogs and am pro prong collar person, depending on the circumstance. You just have to use the TOOL that works for your dog, period. I was 10 when I was allowed to get my first dog, and my parents always *paper trained* the dog. You see, that's why NOW I am always against the use of those pee pads. Our little dog, when I was 10 years old, DID mess in the house. Gee, I wonder why. As for crates......well, there could always be the chance that your dog NEEDS to be boarded or stay at the Vet. When they are used to being confined, there's no problem. So, crates are a good thing and far from being cruel. Dogs are SAFE when in their crate and can't chew the house apart when you're not home. Just to let you know, I'll be 56 in October and don't find age as an insult.

  • I am old, and I never owned a crate until a couple of years ago.
    I confined my dogs to one room when I was housebreaking, and it basically served the same function.

    I think the crate makes it a little easier, but I am still not comfortable leaving a dog crated all day.

    Likewise, I had never heard of a prong collar until I came here. I just used a flat collar or chain collar.

    I can say that until recently people were not terrified of disciplining their dogs. That is new, and not a good new; IMO.

    Dogs are more humanized now, and people seem to be afraid of hurting their feelings, which makes for some VERY ill-mannered and misunderstood dogs.

    (My parents would never have drowned a puppy. My mother spent a fortune in vet bills saving a cat that had been hit by a car back in the 60s, and we hand-raised kittens that lost their mom at a young age.)

    My dog slept in my bed with me, and ate Gravy Train and Gaines Burgers (both of which are total crap.)

  • I'm no where near an older dog owner but I have never used crates, shockers, chokers, professional trainers, etc and I have always had the most well behaved dogs I know. Dogs lives were harder years ago but I do believe all the crap people are coming out with is ridiculous. Like even though your dog is house trained crate it while your gone, never put your hand on a dog (I'm not saying punch it but now if you just push a dog away from something people want to gasp and call you an animal abuser) Some things have changed for the better, some for the worse.

  • Well this old fart still believes that most of the new fangled gadgets are a waste of money. I have used a chain collar and a regular 6 ft lead and commands on my dog since I was a very young fart. As I got a little older (and got a Irish Setter, beautiful but stubborn as hell) I saw that there were these wonderful things called prongs and e-collars which make it so much easier and kept me from pulling out most of my hair (and kept me from killing the Irish Setter)
    I have never used a crate except for transporting a dog, I have never brushed a dogs teeth, never had any need for it, I gave them good food and lots of raw bones and have never had a dog with bad teeth or gums.

    The one thing that I have learned in my older years is nutrition. But maybe that is a bunch of hype too. My first Border Collie lived on Kennel Ration every day for 17 years before it killed her.

    Today too many people want to use the easy way not the best way.

    add-LOL I guess I am the only old fart in here tonight.

  • I am 23 but i had never heard of crates or gentle leaders until i came on here and i started reading about how you cannot housebreak a dog without a crate etc, which i know is pure BS because my dogs were trained fine without one. They just were kept in the back-hall/kitchen until they were trained.

    In terms of the food, my dog has always eaten table scraps and gone periods of time where he ate nothing but table scraps and has done fine. Today i saw dog food marketed towards individual breeds.... now if anyone doesn't see through that for the huge scam that it is, they shouldn't own a dog.
    My grandparents always had dogs and my grandfather raced greyhounds, his dogs were fed table scraps but also drank blood that was sent for from the abattoir nearby.... i have no idea what the blood was for and don't really want to know either. However as he was older 70s/80s and before he died they had a kerry blue terrier and he used to buy the dog a steak once a week and cook it and give it all to the dog... So i guess older dog owners can change with time.

    I really haven't noticed a huge change here from how i am told it used to be from older family members but i am relying on their memory for that and i don't think the lack of change is down to an age thing, but more of a cultural thing.
    The majority of dogs aren't fixed, they eat supermarket food and table scraps, they are kept outside and if they are trained they are trained with a choker as prongs aren't that well known here. Most dogs however aren't trained in terms of any real OB but as long as they come when they are called, that seems to be good enough.

    There are a few changes though, with the ''designer dog breeds'' and stuff like that, my neighbour has a 'mini yorkie', a huge push towards getting dogs from the pound or the re-homing centre here etc. There has also been a HUGE increase in the number of purebred dogs in the last 5 or so years. Before then the only purebred dogs really were labs, border collies, jack russells and the odd doberman or rotty. Now there are dalmatians, bulldogs, shar peis, schnauzers etc all running around.

  • Well, I am only 21 years old, but I still remember how dogs were raised because I grew up with dogs. We never had a crate for our dogs or special food. Bear (now deceased) ate powdered eggs, cooked and scraps. I never seen that dog eat dog food and he was very healthy with the most beautiful curly fur. He was our guard dog and companion. He wouldn't let anyone in the house without my mother's permission. lol! The police even wanted him because of his temperament. Gentle when you know him, fierce when you didn't. Bear had the run of the house and we could do anything to him. He never bit, EVER!! That's back when dogs were very stable and had real jobs to do, instead of being bred for pet quality and prance around rings. I remember when dobermans were a feared breed and to see a real-live police shepherd doing it's job. At that time, people owned dogs for what they NEEDED them for, not what they looked like. I still pick my breeds of dogs based just on that. My two current dogs have jobs. Teensy is pest control (summer,winter,spring,fall) all-year round, even though she is a house dog. She still has a job to do when she hits the backyard, inside the house, front yard. She loves it and her temperament is perfect. Taylor's job is to help Teensy with pest control and warn me when someone is coming up the driveway. Every dog in this neighbourhood has a job (not many are outside) and they all bark when thugs are walking down the road being loud in the middle of the night. Those thugs haven't been back since. We don't live in a bad neighbourhood, but it's always some ghetto idiots somewhere in a quiet neighbourhood. The tools used to train dogs have changed. When growing up, mom used a flat buckle or choker chain and 6ft leash. Dogs should be raised as dogs, even if they live inside houses now. My dogs are still raised as dogs......I spoil them sometimes, but I still see them as dogs. They eat better kibble (merrick), which doesn't cost too much. Other than that, everything else is still the same. I have a crate and they kennel-up when I say so, I just do it to mess with them. I still have no use for that crate, except for Taylor to lounge in outside. I use a choker on Taylor and I know how to use it effectively. Neighbours look at me like "WTF?!?" when I walk my 83lbs dog with my 10lbs dog and me only weighing 110lbs. lol!! They probably think I'm a kid because I am short, skinny and look young in the face and body. lol!!! Oh, well. They can keep guessing my age. hahaha. Teensy walks decent in a harness or cat collar (it has a bell on it). I can put anything around my dogs neck and walk them with no problem.

  • First, please stop using the Prong collar - they hurt the dog and can cause serious neck injuries if not used properly. Now to your question. There was only the Choke Chain for training. Basic obedience was all the training the dogs got. We house-trained pups without crates, as you stated. There weren't any animal behaviourists, or holistic medicines. We took care of our dog's injuries and illnesses ourselves, instead of running to the Vet for every little thing. 'Gentle Leaders' were only used on horses. There were only about 2 - 3 brands of dog food. (Dr. Ballard's and Ralston Purina). Not all dogs lived long lives, as they were free to roam the streets - not having to be tied up. This also caused many dog fights.
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Thursday, January 12, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Has any one ever used the "Dog Training Company" in NJ?

I was considering using them, but I wanted to see if any one has used them, and if they were satisfied with their work.

Service Dog Training and Selection - Train Dedicated Companions for Disabled People



Recommended Answer:
no

ricks canine workshop on long island is VERY GOOD

The Ultimate In Dog Training: Schutzhund Dog Training


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    Sunday, November 6, 2011

    Dog Health Questions: Dog training for government agency?

    Today there are upteen DOG use within varies sections of government/city/state/fed. They are vital. How do I and my kids involve ourselves training such?

    A Working Dog - Training



    Recommended Answer:
    You cannot get involved in the actual training unless you have a kennel/training facility that supplies dog to such agencies.
    Most police, govt agencies "think" that they know better and can train better dogs when the sad fact is that civilian sport dog trainers with some knowledge of police requirements in the K-9 field know and train better dogs then most agencies ever could. Good luck.

    Hunting Dog Training Equipment


    • Contact some dog trainers/behaviourists in your area, and ask them if they can give you advice, and point you in the right direction to get your certifications, etc. Some trainers even offer vocational schools and offer certified training/behaviour classes.
    Read More...

    Saturday, October 29, 2011

    Dog Health Questions: Can anyone recommend a good dog training collar?

    I have been thru two already, they dont seem to last. I need a model that can controll two collars. any product you would recommend and a good place to purchase it?

    Proven Dog Training Methods



    Recommended Answer:
    http://www.dog.com/search.aspx?query=&hi…

    Dont really know what type of collar you are looking for, but this is a good website, cheap, and great shipping prices...

    Review of some of user rating and see what people thought of certain ones...

    Best Of Luck

    Who Let The Dogs Out? Pointers For In Home Dog Training


    • I think that you may be talking about Electric collars. If so, Dogtra and Tritronics both sell excellent products and you can buy directly from them. Hope I helped!!

    • a model that can control 2 collars-are you talking about a remote collar-or a leash that attaches to 2 collars?
      for a remote collar-i recommend Innotek, Dogtra or Tri-Tronics
      http://www.leerburg.com/electric.htm

      for a standard training collar-i use a prong collar with a nylon slip as a back up in-case it comes undone during a correction.
      http://www.leerburg.com/prong.htm

      there are leashes that are made to attach to 2 collars, or a collar and a harness.
      http://www.ellaslead.com/inc/sdetail/101…
      But it is cheaper to buy a coupler and use that.

    • I don't know the name of what you are looking for but I do remember seeing one when I was looking for my dog a training collar. Go to www.thepetstoreonline.com. They are really reasonable and if you purchase something over $75 you get free shipping. Oh and they sent me like 12 extra batteries for free. My collar works great and I haven't even had to change the battery even once.

    • I believe you are talking about electronic training collars. I've been through several and the only brand that lasted is Tri-Tronics. The best prices I found were from Cabela's. You can also but them directly from the manufacturer and they have a program that lets you trade in your old collars of any brand. The brands that didn't last for me are Innotec, DT Systems, and Petsafe.

    • This is about as good as there is unless you want to go for a pricy one.
      http://www.dobbsdogs.com/catalog/index.p…

    • if you use pincher or chocker collars that can end up having your dog get cancer and a regular can do this too if you always pull them. get it a harness and you can pull and tug.

    • tritronics has some good ones. or you can just type 'remote dog collars into your search engine and do some research. what you plan to use it for will determine the type you should get . we have tritronics for hunting, and a small inotek for hikes. yu can go directly to the manufacturer, or try bass pro shops or cabella's. but like i said, do some really good research. they have come a long way in the last several years and have a lot of options now.

    • I would start doing some serious dog training sessions ASAP. Dog trainers/schools are OK, but if YOU are the one that trains your dog, he'll listen to you much more willingly. Here's a dog training course I recommend... http://tinyurl.com/38fecn

    • I would start doing some serious dog training sessions ASAP. Dog trainers/schools are OK, but if YOU are the one that trains your dog, he'll listen to you much more willingly. Here's a dog training course I recommend... http://tinyurl.com/ytsbw6
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    Saturday, October 15, 2011

    Dog Health Questions: Has anyone use Don Sullivans dog training video?

    Just wanted to know if anyone has use his training videos and what kind of results you got from the.

    Dog Training Using Electronic Collars



    Recommended Answer:
    I haven't used it myself, but several of my friends did...and they're the reason I didn't. I've seen the videos. They're not really anything special. He goes through the same tips that everyone else gives--he just has videos, which really don't do all that much. You'd be paying through the nose for something you can get online for free. My friends all regretted paying for them.

    Dog Clicker Training Can Make Dog Training Easy


    • Lol uhh no..
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    Friday, September 16, 2011

    Dog Health Questions: Which method for dog training is better clicker or reward?

    I have a 7 month old Belgian Malinois and I want to teach him some simple tricks. I don't intend to make him a protection dog. I know it's quite costly. I was able to teach him some obedience training like sit, stay, fetch etc. and I'm using the reward method and I find it ok. I'm just curious. Is clicker training better?

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    Recommended Answer:
    clicker + reward training is what our trainer recommends. personally i find the clicker annoying but it seems to work well. we only use it to teach something new and than its only reward and than nothing. before our obedience training we used just rewards and that worked pretty well 2, but i think clicker gets her attention faster and the response is faster so she stays focused better.

    just to clarify what clicker training that we used is

    it goes like this
    1) you give command
    2) dog performs
    3) you click right away
    4) and give a treat right away.
    so click and treat in almost one move. clicker sound is unique and they associate that with something good (as a praise followed by a treat). you than slowly fade it out.

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    • actually clicker training is reward training -- the clicker is simply a marker for a behavior that tells the dog that it will be rewarded for doing this specific behavior. With 'reward' type training without a clicker, you just use something else as a marker like a word or sound and then reward. Neither is 'better' than the other just different. With either you use something the dog likes (toy, treat) to reward after marking the behavior - dog sits, you click or say yes or smile or whatever and then treat the dog. If you aren't consistant with the marker maybe a clicker is better for you but it just depends on you. I find it easier to not use a clicker as I am not THAT coordinated and am used to using a verbal marker. Good luck.

      add: You cannot use a clicker in an obedience trial any more than you can use a treat. Both should be weaned off once the dog is actually trained for an exercise and be sporatically rewarded so that it does it not for the treat but because it is trained to. In the obedience ring you can only give the proper command and that is all.

    • My dog and I are currently using both. When he does the trick, give him the treat while clicking the clicker. That way if you are ever in an obedience trial (since they do not allow treats) use the clicker, the dog will think that you have treats with you.

      Good Luck!!

    • treats

    • Clicker training is very like reward training, but the click preceeds the reward. Clicks can be delivered at exactly the moment the dog is doing the right thing, regardless of how far away from the dog you are at the time. The food reward immediately follows the click. It's a more precise way of using positive reinforcement to train an animal. Here is a little video introduction http://www.clickertraining.tv/product.html?item=FREE-01
      You will find great information on the following website http://www.clickertraining.com/basics

    • Clickers can be good and bad. For TEACHING tricks they can be very helpful so your dog knows exactly when he did the right thing. They can help a lot with more complicated tricks. For obedience they are a waste of time. Chasing after a dog with a clicker to try and get it to come will not work.

      Always use treats when teaching a new trick or obedience. Once they know it just praise them and give them a treat every now and then, but they should just do it for praise.

      If you want to teach your dog obedience visit www.dogproblems.com It's a lot cheaper than going somewhere and you can do it when you have time. I used it and it's amazing!!

    • clicker IS reward training - the click comes before the treat.

    • My trainer recommended instead of a clicker, use a marker word. So we use the word "Good" instead of a click. We always have our words but may not have a clicker.

    • There is no 'better training.' It really depends on the dog. Some dogs respond to the clicker some don't! The clicker works like a reward, because when you start using it, you reward and click consistently to help the dog learn to respond to the clicker. One of my dogs is scared of the noise of the clicker, the other immediately responds to it! Just keep in mind that positive training is good, negative/abusive training is not!

    • We used both at first and slowly went to treats only. After a few weeks of only treats we only showed love.

    • In order to start clicker training you use it with a reward ...so my answer is both.

    • Clicker training did nothing for my dog especially since he was brought up on rewards.

      If he does something good and is expecting a cookie and gets a click, he is not going to be too excited.

    • what ever works for u.we use treats

    • clicker is easier but you wont always have it with you

    • The clicker just 'marks' the behavior you want and lets the dog know a treat is coming. You can do the same thing by saying 'yes' or 'good dog'. The clicker can be more precise and once the dog understands what it means, can learn to work for clicks, learning new behaviors more easily.

      www.fearfuldogs.com

    • Some basic learning theory:

      Reinforcement is the process whereby a given behavior is made stronger. This can be done in a couple of ways. Positive reinforcement is when something good follows the behavior. The dog sits, and you give a treat. The treat is the reinforcer. The appearance of the reinforcer produces reinforcement, which is an internal process. Negative reinforcement occurs when the behavior results in something unpleasant going away, such as the pressure of a choke collar easing when the dog gets back into heel position. Walking at heel is reinforced by the easing of the pressure.

      Things that have reinforcing qualities in and of themselves are called primary reinforcers. Food is one of the big ones. A treat then, is a primary reinforcer. The sound of a clicker in and of itself is not a reinforcer at all, until it is conditioned to a primary reinforcer. Then it becomes a conditioned or secondary reinforcer.

      Here's the deal with clicker training. You first have to get your dog to associate the sound of the clicker with a primary reinforcer. You do this by pairing the sound of the clicker with a primary reinforcer until it becomes a conditioned reinforcer. Click the clicker, give a treat. Repeat several times. Take a break, then repeat the whole sequence. Do this enough, and the clicker will take on reinforcing properties. Now when you're training your dog, click the clicker as soon as he performs the desired behavior, and the dog will be reinforced. Occasionally, you should go back and repeat the click-treat bit, just to keep the association between clicker and treat going. That's sometimes called loading the clicker.

      Rather than a clicker, try making a clicking sound with your tongue, or any little short, sharp sound you can. This has the advatanges of your not having to fumble with the clicker in one hand, and the lead in the other. Also, it's unique to you, nobody else can duplicate it. Anyone can get a clicker, and if one goes off at the wrong time, it can mess up what you're trying to do. Finally, it's free and you won't leave it at home or lose it.

      So if you try to train a dog with a clicker without first building the association between the click and some really good treat, you're probably not going to get too far.
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