Showing posts with label invisible fence dog training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label invisible fence dog training. Show all posts

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Dog Health Questions: I need help with an outline for my research paper about dogs?

Dogs and Humans
Thesis Statement: There are many methods on how dogs should be train.
I.What is dog training?
A.Why is important?
B.Main Point 1
C.Main Point 2
D.Main Point 3
II.Types of Training
A.Supporting Detail 1
1.Elaboration
2.Elaboration
a.Specific example
b.Specific example
B.Supporting Detail 2
C.Supporting Detail 3
III.Conclusion
A.Main Point 1
B.Main Point 2Help if you can

Dog Training Collars Are Not All Alike



Recommended Answer:
A couple of sites you may find useful are www.clickerlessons.com and www.koehlerdogtraining.com.
Clickerlessons is a site that describes positive reinforcement clicker training and gives detailed lesson instruction. Koehler dog training is more of a correction dog training. This was used more years ago. Both methods are effective training methods and reliable, but clicker training is much more fun for your dog. Clicker training is also more effective when transitioning to agility training. From what I've seen and experienced, Koehler training give you a dog that responds with military type of precision and enthusiasm while positive reinforcement methods such as clicker training produces a dog that is happy and enthusiastic about training. Rather than just reading about the training methods, you might want to consider seeing positive reinforcement lessons in person. Every agility training class that I have been to does positive reinforcement. You may find it much harder to find correction training methods to see in person.

Using a Dog Training Harness to Train Your Dog


  • If this is YOUR paper, why aren't YOU doing it yourself?
    I'm not getting any credit for this, do your own damned work.

  • I can't do your work for you, but if you want training methods--google woodhouse dog training, Ceasar Milan dog training, and just dog training.

  • Just research it on google they should have all the answers you need. Don't take the lazy way out of work just do it yourself and that way you have more chance of being right and getting more points.
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Monday, October 1, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Is there alternative for repetition method of dog training?

when you train dog, you often have to use lot of repetition to make it register in dog's mind to act certain way after he hears command. With lot of repetition, the dog learns it. After that as soon as he hears the command that was trained, he acts as taught. However as a human being, repetition is very boring and tiring. I wish dog can learn like humans did -- just say it once and its understood. the repetition method is pain. i just don't feel like being in the mood to repeat. i just can't. you can keep dog's interest by giving him treat or telling him "good boy" repeatedly. But from human stand point that's just so ridiculous

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



Recommended Answer:
Hmmm..I guess that means that dogs are not human?
Dogs require an average of 14 repetitions to learn a task. Live with it, or don't have a dog.
Dogs are NOT for everybody. It sounds like you are one that doesn't need a dog.

Show Dog Training - Be A Winner!


  • I have a big Guardian dog, and she was very aggressive to strangers in our house. I knew she could be trained because her mother was not aggressive. I don't know how to start correcting her behavior so I went to ask my friend who had k9 and he recommended me a book about dog training. I got several good tips from the book as well as a personal email on how to correct her behavior. Following the dog training tips from his book I was able to train my dog In a short period of time. Now she was so controlable and I don't have any worries about visitors coming to our house. You may want to check it. It might be of help to you. Just see the link below the resources section.

  • People need repetition to. How many things did you learn without only having it told or shown to you once? I bet you didn't learn to drive a car after only one round of practice. Repetition is only tiring or boring if what you are learning is presented in a boring manner. The same is true for dogs, if you don't know what motivates your dog all the repetition in the world isn't going to help.

    Dogs can't learn like people because they AREN'T people and their brains are not wired nor developed like ours are.

  • Nothing on the market explained dog training the way we thought it should be explained. So I wrote my own dog training book. You can start learning how to get your dog to listen to you, anywhere you go, with my best-kept and most effective training secrets you can start transforming your dog in less than 10 minutes . .

  • Hey I see that you need some sort of guide that will give you tips and tricks to help your dog become fully trained and more healthy. Recently one of my friends really needed some advise on how to train his dog. he followed the dog training academy course to successfully have a full trained dog in a few weeks.

  • Hey i see that you need some sort of guide that will give you tips and tricks to help your dog become fully trained and more healthy.Recently one of my friends really needed some advice on how to train his dog.He followed the dog training academy course to successfully have a full trained dog in a few weeks.

  • Hey xyz I see that you need some sort of guide that will give you tips and tricks to help your dog become fully trained and more healthy. Recently one of my friends really needed some advise on how to train his dog. He followed the dog training academy course to successfully have a full trained dog in a few weeks.

  • hi [askername]
    i understand the problem you ar going though when trying to lose weight
    my friendis in the same situation as you nothing worked for him until he came across the diet solution program he s been haveing great success with it maybe this is samething which could be right for you

    well good luck to you

  • How do human children learn what words mean? Babies are not born knowing a language. Children do not learn ABCs by hearing it once.

    Sorry you think repetition is boring. Good thing teachers don't.

  • My mother trained her two dogs using the dog training academy and had good success. Her dogs really responded and it could help you too. Best of luck.

  • Straight repetition is NOT effective. You'll learn this when you've taught a dog a command -- say "down". The dog does it. Now go across the room and give the same command -- nothing! What does this tell you? The dog does not take the cue that YOU think you are giving!!

    What to do -- personally I practice commands from all different locations (in front, aside, behind, across the room...etc) I do rally exercises because these are all different "noodling" exercises, variation on a theme that keep us both interested. Its a lot more fun to heel forward, and then backward! Pivot to the right, the left, make a 360 or a 270 turn.

    My dogs are way too smart for a "good boy" and a treat to keep their attention.

    Mix it up, be creative and have fun. You'll have a better trained dog this way.

  • How often you have to repeat something depends a great deal on the expertise of the trainer and the interest of the dog in learning. I've trained and shown many dogs and some caught on much faster than others. My OTCH Sheltie learned extremely fast and thus finished his UDX quickly also, however I didn't think I would ever finish a UDX with another of my shelties.
    Competition training is a great deal different than training a dog simply as a pet and that's where you are hearing about repetition training. When competing you need a dog that has been "muscle trained" as well as "brain trained" in order to be able to do the same thing over and over again in a very distracting environment.
    For training a pet, you should not have to train this way.
    You can't compare, intellectually, human training with animal training as the human brain and the animal brain are not at all wired the same.

  • Well because they are not human and that is why you get tired of them.

    A trainer or a person well equipped to take on training doesn't feel this way, they do it to see the results and because the dog is not humane you have to do it a different way to get the dog to respond.

    Remember they are an animal born in the wild and we are putting the dogs in our human society so in order to do that you need to train.

    What about people that cannot hear or see, do you know the stress that is involved in teaching them every day life, it just doesn't occur in animal form it happens in all life.
    What about someone with down syndrome? It takes on a daily task and it doesn't work over night.

    So I think you just would not want to try, you give up to easily on things. Sorry to hear that.
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Thursday, September 20, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Would you say my dog is bonded more with my father?

i rephrased this because some people assumed i was having it out with my father...when in truth i am not.

would you even say its my dog anymore?

alright i have a pembroke corgi named Melly

i had her since she was 8 weeks, i took her to handling classes, dog training seminars ect ect parks and visits with my cousins dog club essentially i bring her everywhere i still do.

i walk her twice a day , i feed her water her, bathe her brush her and pay for her vet bills and she sleeps in her own bed beside my own. or rather she did.
she doesnt respond when i call her. my father can be standing right beside me and i will call and nothing he calls and she is running towards him.

she will no longer go to bed in my room and if i put her in my room and lock the door she will howl all night until he gives in and comes and gets her.

she refuses to sit in my lap anymore and instead will struggle to be free from me and rush to him and promptly sprawl out on his stomach.

now when i come home she doesnt greet me instead she remains out by the fence staring at my dads parking spot and begins to cry loudly and jump around when he gets home. ive tried treats but she eats them then runs to him.

my dad is asking to keep her since i will be transferring and we are all worried that she will mourn herself to death.

she refuses to eat until he is home and will just lay their keening ever so often.

would giving her to my dad be a good idea? im thinking so.

my parents had already agreed years ago and changed some things when i graduated and went to college that when i transfer they plan to help me get a dog so i wont be alone when i transfer. he however is giving me some of the money early due to the fact that he wants to keep Mel. im not sure why he is giving it to me early but it makes me feel like he is buying her which is why i said it.

when we go on walks she will even keep looking back at the house unless my dad comes with us

when he doesnt provide her with food and isnt in command how can she see him as pack leader? his own dog doesnt see him as pack leader nor does my mothers the other dogs do not treat him as leader.

i said in the other that it felt like he was buying her from me and i felt guilty about accepting it. why? because i truly cant live without a pet i get very depressed i have been diagnosed with depression and dogs help me cope.

Protection Dog Training - Frequently Asked Questions



Recommended Answer:
For whatever reason, the dog has clearly bonded with your dad. Let him buy her, and when you are settled in your new home, get another dog.

Dog Training Tips and Tricks - Ways to Make Dog Training Easy For You and Your Pet


  • Yes she's bonded with your dad as pack leader, which is what I said in the last answer. However, that doesn't mean you have to give your dog to your dad. You'll just have to take the spot as pack leader when you move out. Being pack leader is more than just feeding the dog and spending time with it. It's how you carry yourself. You should attend a training course with the dog to learn more about this.

  • sshe or he might be a better pac leader than u

  • Let him have her and get a nice German Shepherd who will bond instantly with you and only you.

    I know the same. Had a Scottie that preferred men ova me...
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Monday, August 6, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Dog not good with children??

So I have discovered a little problem with my female GSD, wini. She is 1 1/2 yrs. old. Recently when kids come to the house she is very bad! She gets nervous and barks at them. When they go to pet her she kind of like shrinks down and sometimes runs away. She just dosen't like them. Now she is jumping on them and is snapping at them. She hasn't bit any child, but she like snaps and tries.

She is in dog training. We have kids coming to the house alot. So I want her to behave when they come over. The trainer said a lot of dogs aren't good with small children and kids in general. How can I get her to be comfortable and good with kids? Do I have to lock her away every time a kids comes over?? I don't want someone to get hurt in the process.

Hunting Dog Training and Snakes



Recommended Answer:
If there is ANY doubt in your mind, Wini should be crated when small children are in the house. Some dogs have more prey drive than others.Shepherds and other herding breeds usually have alot of it.Children act a lot like prey, squealing, running, erratic behavior.You should not be letting children pet her when she is cowering and running away. She is letting you know she is uncomfortable in the situation, and she needs to trust that you will keep her safe,and most importantly you need to keep children safe. She may be better with kids when she is very reliably trained, she may mellow with age, she may get better with constant positive exposure to children, or she may never be good around them. Until you know for sure, do not put her in a situation where she can bite. You may have to get a behaviorist in addition to your trainer as well.

Service Dog Training: Training Your Dog To Perform Human Tasks


  • Just to be on the safe side, you should keep her away in a separate room when kids are over. Once the dog training is over, have her around the kids but keep her muzzled until you start to see improvements in the behavior. Please teach the kids how to interact with the dog.

    It is wrong to not take precaution and irresponsible when you know for a fact that your dog is snapping at children.

  • A lot of dogs aren't comfortable around kids because they're loud and hyperactive and unpredictable.

    Does she actually go after the kids or is it only when they go after her? With many dogs they'll be just fine if you teach the kids to leave them alone, then the dog doesn't feel so threatened.

  • i think you should practice a with a dog when it doent bark and and act bad give it a treat praise it i dont think u should lock her away theyre never learn like that once u have confindence in ur dog your dog shouldnt act bad

  • fill a bottle of water and when she does that squirt her with water

    and thentell her NO and when shes good give her a treat and tell

    her good girl. thats the way i trained my puppy.. goodluck :)

  • What do you do when she acts out like this? You CAN'T punish her. See, she's a fear reactive dog. The kids make her anxious, so she tries to remove herself from them. Then if she's forced to stay near them or if she's punished for the way she's behaving, then she'll begin lashing at out them. She's trying to keep the scary monstrous kids away because not only are they loud and fast, but for some reason she doesn't understand, she keeps getting punished when they happen to be around. So, she's trying to get away from them, and if/when that doesn't work, she's trying to actively get *them* away from *her.* Instead of scolding or otherwise punishing her, if she's reacting, just calmly and silently remove her from the situation.

    Yes, for now, always keep her away from the kids! There is *nothing* to gain by setting her up for disaster by keeping her out with the children. Set her up for success -- prevent an accident from possibly happening in the first place. If she really likes being out with you, though, you can use this to your advantage. If you silently and calmly lead her away and separate her from you every time she's reactive, she'll slowly learn that acting out will result in separation.

    What exactly about the kids triggers her anxiety? Make sure they're being CALM in the home. You have to explain to them that they have to quiet, slow-moving and calm around your dog! And obviously, she doesn't want them touching her, so simple: DO NOT let them go up and pet her. Set the rules in your home! Kids must leave her alone and be calm if she's in the room.

    In a *controlled* way, you can have her interact with kids. Begin with the calmest, obedient child you know. Have your dog on the leash (just in case), and just exist in the room together. Don't force the dog to go near the kid if she doesn't want to! Take baby steps. Tiny, little baby steps. Reward her with her absolute favorite food for being "brave" around the child, and don't rush it. Slowly work up to the child and dog being able to be close without incident. When the dog is 100% comfortable with the current step, advance to the next step. Switch the kid for another and start over. With tons of kids who are all calm and leave her alone, she'll be able to form the generalization that kids are okay. I'm sure she'll never love them, but you just need them to be able to coexist without anyone getting hurt.

    Oh, and if this behavior just began out of the blue recently, bring her to vet. Have them run a tick titer and full six-panel thyroid test to rule out a medical cause.

    Always reward her excellently for doing what you like. If she's willing to take so much as a step toward a child (even from a far distance), reward her. And don't skimp. This isn't the time to use kibble as treats, go for something like chicken, hot dog, cheese, whatever will work best.

    Mind your calming signals!!
    http://www.diamondsintheruff.com/calming…
    http://www.canis.no/rugaas/onearticle.ph…

    Try reading these books for more help.
    http://www.amazon.com/Cautious-Canine-Pa…
    http://www.amazon.com/Living-Kids-Dogs-W…
    http://www.amazon.com/Love-Dog-Understan…

  • Well we do not know if your dog snaps out of fear, excitement, bad breeding, had a problem with children in the past..
    Here are suggestions that may help but a professional behavior person would be best so they can see the interaction that I am just guessing at.
    First when children are going to approach by running bell or knocking dog needs to sit and stay position, when person enters you go to the dog say "KID" or whatever word and hand the dog a nice treat. Do this every time so the dog will associate children with great things instead of bad.Then let the dog rise of course.
    SECONDLY. Never let a child approach her, pet her, hover over her when she is comfortable let her come to a young person sniff and leave so she doesn't feel threatened. Making sure she has a safe and secure place when she doesn't want bothered. A crate opened is great for her with a sheet over the top and a little on sides so she can hide if she wants to. If not she can approach a child sniff,,children needs to stand sideways not staring at the dog..YOu need to have control of the dog without being nervous feeding the dog bad energy.They sense nervousness. If the dog accepts a child by sniffing and walking or standing hand dog another treat and say child..get about the business. Do not put the dog in a situation where it can hurt a child, where a child can hurt it, where children will run or be loud and playful or wrestling around she is not able to at this time to cope like that.
    As always tho a professional may well be the answer to your prayers if you want a well behaved dog who may learn to cope with children before it becomes more aggressive.
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Friday, April 6, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Dog training emergency!?

i have a three year old pomeranian chihuahua mix. we rescued her from an abusive home, and she was shuffled around from place to place before being brought to our calm home.
she knows basic things like stay and come here and sit, but following them... that's another story. once and a while she will, other times she will disregard it. not only that she pee's in the house like none other! i am shampooing the carpet atleast 1-2 times a week now. i know the scent will never fully leave but i can't stand it, so it will atleast smell good for a few days.
she pee's little puddles a lot, which is common for little dogs, i know. and there were probably dogs here before that she can still smell and she is marking her territory.
so anyways, she is obviously a very timid dog, and whenever my boyfriend or i try to enforce rules, not by shouting or being abrasive, just stern "lay down" or "stay" she picks it up a little especially when there are treats used as a reward for doing what we say.
but she is pretty disobedient. now i understand that i should be taking her for walks atleast once a day, and i would have no problem doing so, but she is shy of the leash and i have to pick her up atleast 20 times to move her because she just SITS and sticks to the ground like a statue.
not only that, i would have no problem tying her up outside for atleast 5 minutes every hour for her to go potty, but she just pee's so much that i cant even attempt to do it because every time i get up to let her out there is another 3 spots of tiny pee on the carpet.
i am having a general obedience problem and a really hard time teaching her anything without her either ignoring it or getting scared and just not moving all together. but this is getting to be out of control i love her and would never get rid of her, i just need help and all the people at the pet stores can offer is their 300 dollar a month obedience classes that i cant afford. i can afford to teach her on my own and i am willing to do anything!
i just need some serious advice because i cant keep spraying oxyclean on the carpet and shampooing it every week to have it smell musky and like pee in a few more days.
also she is really obese. she was malnutritioned when we got her and i just let her eat to get healthy and now she is a fat spoiled dog and she gets upset when i take her food and just stares at me like why did you do that
ALSO
she DOES NOT MAKE A PEEP. she will bark a little bit when the doorbell rings or whine a tiny bit when we are eating and she wants scraps but other than that, she doesnt growl, bark, whine, talk, nothing. i would like to have a vocal dog, are there any ways to get her to do those things?
and also
she wont play with ANY TOY THAT I BUY HER i have tried alllllll kinds and even show her how to play when them but she just runs away or turns her head.
PLEASE HELP. i appreciate any advice you can give and as thorough and touching on as many topics as possible.

Easy Dog Obedience Training Can Be Done at Home With a Do it Yourself Dog Training Program



Recommended Answer:
You have so many questions it's hard to know where to start. As the first answer said - get a vet check in case it's a UTI problem. But I think you need to take her to some obedience classes, which will teach you as well as her some very basic obedience. You say she knows basic commands but doesn't always obey them - she doesn't know them! Dogs will only obey a command if there is no alternative option, if you let her get away without sitting even once after the command "sit", then she thinks that sit means "sit" or "do nothing". If she is fat that could explain excess weeing, as well as reluctance to walk - try a diet and enforce walking - not carrying, take her to the park and let her run with other dogs. Your best bet is a professional trainer and a good routine.

Good Luck.

Dog Training - How NOT To Train Your Dog


  • woah, stop right there. you touched your dog, WHERE?

  • First off - Get her on a strict routine. Get her body clock knowing when food time is, when sleep time is, when pee time is. Treat her like a 7 week old puppy. She doesn't have the basics, so take it back to the beginning. You should also buy her a crate. A crate will help her feel less stressed and will allow your carpets some peace. Invest in doggy diapers and a puppy book. She won't walk or play becuse she A) is freaked B) is stubborn and C) doesn't see the point. I would use a second leash looped around her middle to encourage forward movement. Also check and see if any of your neighbors have a dog rougly her size that is well socialized. Dogs can often learn from other dogs. I would also post indididual questions on specific breed forums. (You can google for exact addresses.) Good Luck and she should be fine, but like people it will take a little while.

  • Sounds like that dog has too much free roam of your house. Keep it contained in an area that has tile (bathroom or kitchen) until it has mastered the pee and poop routine. Don't let her out of the contained area until she goes pee and poop. Then for a limited time only.
    As for the obese remark, feed her as recommended on the package and divide it in half. feed her twice a day and pick up the food (if any is left) when she walks away. Save it for the next meal. So what if she stares.
    A quiet dog is what most people want. you are blessed.

  • You really sound like you need to take your dog to obedience training. It sounds like you and your b/f have a lot to learn too. Consistency is the key to training. If your dog is obese, don't use treats as rewards. Praise is the best reward a dog can get. What would happen if you train it using treats, then one day she runs off and you call her but she won't come back because you don't have any treat? You will always have praise. Try finding a obedience class that is given at a park. I am not sure where you are, but where I live, there are a lot of classes that people can sign up with and it's not that expensive. Less than $50. Try going to a pet store near you and asking if they can recommend any, explain that you can't afford paying $300 for for obedience class. Also, take her to a vet to check on her urinating problem. Sounds like she is urinating too many times. You can also ask about putting her on a diet.
    I am not sure why she won't bark but that may come when she feels more secure. As for toys, some dogs just don't like to play with toys. Could be that she is just too obese and too lazy to want to chase toys or play.
    You might try reading some books on dog training if you can't find any classes. Look for Caesar's Way, I heard it is a good book although I've never read it.

  • I can help with a couple things. Walking on a leash-don't feed her in the morning instead, put her breakfast in your pocket. Put her leash on her take her outside. Hold the leash in your right hand with it in front of your body but don't pull on it, don't even let her know it's there. Take a kibble in your left hand and put it in front of her nose without facing her. Tell her ,alright lets go, lots of fun this is the best game ever. Get her to follow the kibble a couple steps and then give it to her, let her eat it and then repeat. It will take a lot of patience. Slowly get her to take more steps. The idea is to make her realize that you have her breakfast and she must follow you to get it. Later, when she will follow you aways, you can take a break to feed her several kibbles during your walks and eventually take her for a walk then feed her when you get home. Remember not to face her directly right now as it will cause her to 'freeze up' and they can't learn in that state.
    The piddle spots, buy a package of dog diapers and use them until she's more comfortable. She's probably peeing in submission which is not uncommon in fearful dogs. Don't give into the temptation of cuddling her for acting afraid. Dogs don't sit around dwelling on their past, they live in the now, so teach her you love happy playful dogs the best. Over praise everything that is a step towards that she is very food motivated so use it. There's nothing that says she has to eat her food out of a bowl in the kitchen, if it comes out of your pocket during the course of the day your bonding and training will go so much faster.
    Try to find some natures miracle at Pet-co or equivalent. It puts a smell eating bacteria into your carpet that destroys the smell and stains from all organic sources. Works great.

  • If you are taking her out to potty on a REGULAR basis and she is still peeing inside of your house...you need to have her checked for a urinary tracy infection. Thats what the problem sounds like to me if she is doing it in several different spots, all of the time! Good luck!

  • petsmart classes are for 8 weeks and cost $109 in my town. the trainers will talk to you for free.

    get vet check to make sure the dog is healthy then be consistent with training.

    take outside after waking, feeding and playing. reward.

    walk on leash, reward. cut back on food to lose weight.
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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Dog training help he is an angry eater!?

my dog is a bichon frise he is not a puppy, he is actually about 15 years old. he was recently diagnosed with diabetes so we have to feed him certain food at a certain time. when it comes time to feed him though he goes nuts! i put the bowl down and make him wait, he tries to obey but cannot take it and goes for it. if i take his food away he growls and once bit me. also he eats sooo fast! help

At-Home Dog Training Tips



Recommended Answer:
You can get him a break-fast bowl from dogasaur.com and other sites to slow down his eating. Also, to minimize food aggression, try feeding him from your hand, one piece at a time, and, by stirring his food with your hands before you feed him. This keeps your scent on his food.

Are Electronic Shock Collars Great Dog Training Devices?


  • OH food aggression is very very bad!!!!

    make him wait like you are trying to do and if he goes for the food before you tell him too just slowly walk to the bowl dont use your hands if he bites claim the food make him back away from it by standing over it he might nip your feet but your shoes will protect you from the attack.

    if he does not back away you need to but him in a submissive position straight away until her calms down (make sure he is always completely calm before you even put the food down this could take a while) if you watch the dog whisper you will see how this is done it doesn't hurt the animal at all but it does let him know who is the Boss.

    this will take a lot off patience!! i hope your ready for it. oh when he has backed away from the food pick the bowl up straight up dont pull the food away!!! just lift the bowl straight up cause if you pull it back he will automatically go for the bowl again.

  • At 15 years of age, I wouldn't worry about it either. He is too old to retrain and basically too old to change- which means stop trying to force new eating habits on him. Most likely he is very hungry, afraid of starving, and feeling very bad. So just put his food down and let him go for it. Because Jesus, he maybe only has 2 years left to live. He is OLD. Let him be who he is.Who is he hurting with his food obsession?
    As the saying goes- cant teach an old dog new tricks

  • Maybe you could try hand-feeding him little bits at a time, or maybe just try sitting next to him while he eats so he gets used to you being around while he eats.
    I don't know if this will help, but it worked when my dog started getting a bit food aggressive.

  • Make him sit and wait before you put it down. I do know in humans, diabetes does deteriorate the mental capacity, and that may be going on here. Feed him a little bit at a time.

  • At fifteen years old why are you trying to train him ?
    He's old and ill, just give him his food and let him eat it in peace.
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Saturday, February 4, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Need help with inconsistent dog training?

My husband and I got a dog a few months ago well mostly I got the dog, and the training really hasn't been going well at all. I am just trying to teach some basic manners and toilet training but due to inconsistency it isn't going well at all.

My husband just lets the dog do whatever it wants. He won't discipline it at all. Like the dog will jump up on the sofa when we are eating. I make the dog get down and lay down on the floor. That is his command when we are eating is to lied down on the floor. My husband just lets him sit on his shoulder and pester. If I have a cup on the table next to me and I get up, the dog will jump up and lick in my cup the second I get up. My husband just sits there and lets him do it.

He plays tug of war games and the dog will growl and nip him. He doesn't nip me as I taught him straight away not to nip me.

Now whenever me and my husband try to have a romantic moment on the sofa, the dog will jump up and try to lick all over us and pester. I make him get down and lay down. My husband won't.

It is like my husband thinks it is mean to make the dog do anything at all. I say it isn't being mean to teach the dog he can't jump all over us, get in our food, and bite.

I have explained and asked very nicely to my husband that the dog must learn manners or he will be a horrid pest and ill mannered. It is to the point where he will snap at us for trying to buckle his collar.

Is there any hope in this situation or should I just try to find the dog a new home with a dog trainer or someone experienced? I really love the dog but our house is full of pee and his behavior is getting out of hand. I am trying really hard to train him. I thought about sending him away for training but am afraid it will be undone when he gets home.

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



Recommended Answer:
This sounds to me like more of a problem between you and your husband, than just the fact that he doesn't back you up in training. I've seen this alot of the many years I've been in the dog training world, and unless you and he can come to an agreement, no training is going to work with your dog.
Sit down with him and have a serious talk about what you expect and ask what he expects and work with him before attempting to train your dog. Unless you can work together with a dog, working together on other things will turn out poorly also. By sitting down and discussing your training problems calmly, you will continue to run in to a hubby that is trying very hard to control you.
Not fun.
Here's a site you might both look at and come to terms with training methods that appeal to both of you. This site owner is a well-known professional trainer using all positive methods that are fun for you and your dog;
http://www.dogtrainingbasics.com
click on "articles" next to the picture and scroll down to see which article interests you, but do this together.

Secrets to Dog Training to Stop Your Dog's Behavior Problems


  • You should go to you local petsmart and make sure to bring your dog with you and they will train them for you I have seen them train the dogs and they seem to listen to every command .

  • Google NILIF training and have your husband read about it. Also consider bringing a good trainer/behaviorist into your home to talk some sense into him. You can find a referral through your vet.

    My husband and I had a similar problem with a pointer mix we brought home. He wasn't nearly so bad as yours as he did try, but in the end we couldn't agree on a training method and wound up rehoming the dog. I get periodic updates on him and if it for some reason doesn't work out, no matter if it's years down the road, that we'll take him back.

    If your husband doesn't want to try then you really can't make him. It's a shame, and I wonder if he just doesn't understand or if he just doesn't want a dog. The dog snapping at you and getting between you two is COMPLETELY UNACCEPTABLE. Perhaps it's time you stop explaining and asking nicely and start demanding his cooperation. Tell him that when he lets the dog drink out of YOUR cup that that is not only disgustingly unsanitary (a dog's mouth is filthy) but it's a sign of a complete, utter lack of respect for you and your personal health.

    He needs to learn and realize that the dog's behavior is not a dog "being a dog", it is not letting him express creativity or have a little fun or any other pass-the-buck sentiment that gets him out of helping with the family pet. This dog's behavior is the result of a spoiled brat. Would he let a child behave this way? Probably not. This dog is sending a very clear message, and that message is "I'm in charge here, I do what I want, when I want, and walk all over whomever I want. There will be no cuddling on my couch, there will be no affection or attention that is not regulated and approved by me, and I will eat whatever I want whenever I want." This dog has a major superiority complex.

    Like I said, does your husband not understand, or did he not want a dog in the first place? Failure to participate in training the family dog is a common symptom of somebody who made it clear they didn't want a dog to begin with. Ignoring the problem is ones way of saying it ISN'T their problem, and the fact that he'll let the dog dictate whether you will or will not touch your husband, or let him sample your dinner if you get up, indicates a problem that goes deeper than the stupid dog. Time to ask him what the f*ck his problem is.

    [Add] Call your vet and ask him what he knows about canine behavior. Describe the dog's behavior and see if his line of thinking is the same as yours. Some vets really don't know crap about canine behavior, some know plenty. If your vet's opinion is the same, take the dog in for a routine checkup, husband in tow, and open a discussion.

    Get to the library and pick up some books on dog training and canine behavior.

    Dogs need and crave an orderly, firm pack structure. They are biologically programmed to respond to firm leadership or assume the role of leader when it is absent. Print up pages on NILIF training and Small Dog Syndrome. Tell your husband to grow up. It's a dog, his feelings won't be hurt.

  • if you husband is not following through with the training, then I really don't see how this dog is going to be properly trained. it needs to have structure in its life, when your training it, and your husband is not, it is simply confusing the dog. And will not know right from wrong. But from what your telling me is that the dogs see's you more of an Alpha of the pack in your house hold.You have to convince your husband that there are certain things that are not to be tolerated at all.

  • My dogs behavior is a little about them a ton about me, my husband, family, visitors are irrelevant. My dogs are trained to please me. I teach them what behaviors I allow and what I don't allow. Use the command Shame. I just have to point at my dogs, or snap a finger. Keep working on the cup thing and jumping, it takes time to win the battles, so ignore the husband and focus on the puppy, you will get there. I use a crate* to potty train with, but only for potty training and then I break it down and store it. I put blankets and a small food and water dish in the crate. Dogs don't potty where they eat and sleep. When they are first little, I only expect them to hold their potty for 4 hours, and then 6 hours, then 8 hours and so on. So when they are first little, I set a timer or alarm clock to wake myself up at night to take them *out. I only allow my puppy in the bedroom* or the living room, only one room at a time. They have to graduate to more space. If I allow them to have full run of the house, it will overwhelm them. I take them out the same door each time. I tie a dinner bell to the door handle. Do not use a jingle bell as they could get their toe caught in it. So when they are little, I ring the bell for them, and then open the door to go *outside to potty. When they get bigger, I take their paw and whack the bell and open the door to go potty. Eventually getting to the place where the puppy will ring the bell and let me know when they need to go potty. Dogs want to please you, so it is your job to let them know what behaviors please you and what doesn't. So when my puppy goes potty, I give her a treat*, and clap, and make a fuss and praise her. So she learns that going potty outside makes me happy. If she has an accident, make a disgust sound like “tsst” and take her out right away. I never yell* or spank* my puppies. Take them out when they first wake up, after they eat or drink, before nap, finish romping, when their activities change, or when they are sniffing around. Some puppies go pee right away, but may not go poop until 10 minutes later, so wait for the poop. I have a little play time here, because sometimes I think they are done, and they are not. Puppies train at their own pace. While I may have a puppy that hasn't had an accident in several weeks, I don't let my guard down, the bladder is not grown until 6-months-old and they are not fully potty trained until 1-year old. If they have a setback, shake it off, and start over. I only have my puppies in the crate when I am not watching them. When I am sleeping, cooking, ironing, doing chores, basically when I am not watching her. All other times, she is out of the crate practicing being a "big girl." This is the time I train her how to behave in the house. So we are practicing "no barking", 'no biting", "no jumping", and "don't eat the furniture." I also have to practice "playing inside" so she doesn't knock over things. You must keep the puppy in sight when they are little because they don't know the difference between newspaper and carpet, and you don't want them sneaking off and getting into trouble.
    REVISIONS:
    *I use a CRATE to train with. It is the method I prefer, compared to other methods I have tried. I noticed that if they are in the crate, while I am doing chores, they are o.k., because the crate allows them to see me and be re-assured. The crate can also be a comfort when stored in the basement for dogs who live in areas where thunderstorms and tornados are an issue. . However, use the method that works best for you.....a laundry basket, a cardboard box, a woof-woof house, x-pen, child gates, whatever works for you.
    *OUTSIDE, pee pad, litter box, whichever method you are using.
    *BEDROOMS, I use the bedroom and living room for training, because it works for me. Choose rooms that work for you, but watch for rooms that are damp, or drafty. They don't have to sleep in the bedroom forever, just while they are training.
    *TREATS. I like Charlee Bears for training (a little cracker for a little mouth,) but once they are trained, I cut back on them.
    *SOME PUPPIES have to be told to go potty. A command like "go out" for pee, or "go finish" for poop, might work for you, keep saying “go finish” until the puppy poops. By using commands, the puppy won't get confused when you are visiting someone, on vacation with you, or when you get to a new home. The command will tell them what you want them to do in an unfamiliar place.
    *YELLING. It is not a good idea to "yell" or "spank" your puppy and then take them outside when they have an accident. In your mind you taught potty training, in the puppies mind, it got scolded and put outside, so outside becomes the place it never wants to go, in the puppies mind.

  • Have a serious talk with your husband about how the dog is becoming unmanageable due to him not backing up your training. If you can't get any agreement then it would be better for everyone, including the dog, if it was rehomed on the grounds that the family doesn't have the time or ability to look after it. If your husband agrees to help retrain it, the the first thing to do is get a crate and furnish it with a comfy cushion and a blanket over 3 sides, this - gradually over a couple of weeks - should become your dog's little den and you may soon be able to shut the dog in there at times when you don't need it to be bothering you.

  • Buy a kennel, start going to dog training classes and tell your husband this dog will be competing in obedience and agility so he must start helping you train the dog your way. Look it sounds like your husband is lazy and trying to piss you off. I think you need one more talk and it should be one sided this is what you expect him to do if this happens and his is what happens if the dog does this.

    I am all for letting the dog have privileges but they must be earned and I have a kennel so if my dog wont listen a break in the kennel is what I do. As for the dog growling I don't stop growling it means you have an issue but I would counter condition the dog to let you touch his collar. It sounds like you are very much the force based dog trainer and your hubby is a wet noodle. You both need work, you need to learn free shaping and operant conditioning. Find a positive reinforcement dog trainer. Your hubby needs to learn that being permissive is also wrong and only making a dog that is spoiled.
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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Dog Health Questions: Dog training social problems?

I know the title dosen't make much sense...

I have a dog, Scooby, he's a Blue Heeler and German Shepard mix, and I want him to go through training at the local PetsMart. They have a really good trainer that works there, she's really nice. But she can also be very dominant when training dogs.

But more of my dog's past... my Dad and I found them when coming home on the highway, in the middle of NOWHERE, in a Louisiana swamp. There were six puppies, two pairs of each were different. Two looked like blue heeler, two looked like german shepards, and the other two looked like rat terrier mixes. (Female dogs can get pregnant at the same time with different dogs.) And we saved them, nursed them back to health, they had worms, got rid of them, took them all to the vet, got shots, de-wormed, neutered and spayed, and we managed to give two away to good homes. I kept one of them myself, and he was the blue heeler/german shepard.
Anyways, we live wayyy out in the country so they've got a lot of room to play in, even though it's fenced. A couple of acres of fenced land. And the only socializing any of them get it with each other or when going to the vet. They're ten months old now, so they're pretty much full grown. And they don't socialize well at all. Especially Scooby. When people come over he will NOT go near them, won't sniff them, etc. And if I kinda nudge him over to them he'll force himself back as much as I allow and start growling. He's NEVER bitten anyone, never tried to. I think the growling is just a warning.
But I take him for walks down the road and he loves it, until the vet that lives down the road jogs past him. Or the kids playing ball talk sweet to him. He also has a bad habit of peeing on himself when he gets scared, so I haven't tried to get him to be more social, therefore I won't have to get peed on when he gets nervous.

I'm sorry for telling you his whole life story -_- I must be bored, lol. But I was just wondering if I all of a sudden enroll him in training at PetsMart, will it make his behavior worse? Should I slowly introduce him to people? How? Will he stay this way the rest of his life because it's all he knows now?

Any answers would be appreciated. Thanks : )

Protection Dog Training - Frequently Asked Questions



Recommended Answer:
I wouldn't just thrust him into training without socializing him first. Take him in the car for rides to public park, let him see people without being too close to them and then get him out of the car after a few trips and walk him around. When he acts nervous or barks, just keep walking, drag him along pretend he isn't barking or nervous. If you give into that type of behavior, they get worse and worse. Just keep walking like there is nothing wrong and nothing to be afraid of. But don't leave any slack in the leash/get close enough to people so he can bight them. And have some treats to distract him when he starts crying or barking. I like to watch Cesar Milano the dog whisperer. It has really helped with my dogs, they barked and lunged at people/cars/bicycles... my yorkie also would pee on himself when he was nervous. It would upset me a lot and I felt so bad for him, then when I took him to the groomers one day, she said he was a totally different dog when I left and didn't bark or growl at all. Then I realized what an enabler I really was!! lol Good luck!

Dog Training Methods - Different Ways to Teach Your Pet Dogs Some Useful Skills


  • U need a training guide that u will find in the link below. Hope it helps u.

    http://www.reviewlocator.com/reviews/sec…

  • German Shepherds and ACD, are not supposed to be indiscriminately friendly, one of myGSD would not go to people for petting but if put on a Stand/Stay would be fine while examined even by the vet or at dog shows. Pushing him to people will guarantee he'll hate people more and someone will get bitten. A proper obed class should be fine but most PetsMart suck and an outside one would be much better.In class the dogs are NOT encouraged to socialize, the point is to be obedient when faced with many temptations or distractions. Invite a person over who he is most interested in or fears the least and you both sit on the porch talking and have the person not look at Scooby but toss yummy treats at him.As he gets more comfy with that person you use a diff one. Then when he goes near the person the person can tell him sit then toss the treat. If the vet scares him ask him to not run past Scooby but walk casually and throw food his way. While walking past kids keep him away from them but feed him yummy treats only when the kids are in sight. If he is ball crazy have the person toss a ball to him, underhanded and casually. Basically you want him to see "people near me=FOOD or my BALL". But an aloof dog is an aloof dog and pushing him will get someone bitten or give him a nervous breakdown. You can expect him to hold a stand/stay while someone examines him however, that is a command and not his choice and he will learn the diff. We had a severely shy GSD who would never approach anyone but the family and worked at class for a yr b4 he held the Stand/stay well enough to be shown and get his AKC CD. Also doing an obed routine while going past the kids will focus him on you not them. A well trained dog can not focus on his obed routine and praise and do well and be worried of kids at the same time. ACD standard The Cattle Dog's loyalty and protective instincts make it a self-appointed guardian to the Stockman, his herd and his property. Whilst naturally suspicious of strangers, must be amenable to handling, particularly in the Show ring. Any feature of temperament or structure foreign to a working dog must be regarded as a serious fault.
    The GSD standard The breed has a distinct personality marked by direct and fearless, but not hostile, expression, self-confidence and a certain aloofness that does not lend itself to immediate and indiscriminate friendships
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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Dog Health Questions: With 0 dog training experience, how hard would it be to train a dog these things?

All this good stuff: http://www.iaadp.org/tasks.html

The Importance of Dog Training



Recommended Answer:
Not very hard. Everyone starts out with zero training experience when getting a dog, and they learn on the way.

If you have the books and know how to train it properly, then you can do it. Preferably if you get a trainer in this section (Assis. Dogs) to help.

Dog Training Aids - 8 Reasons You Should Cage Train Your Dog


  • very hard

  • You shouldn't even bother.
    If you want the dog trained correctly you need to be trained how to do it yourself first.
    Why don't you just get a professional to do it, or go on a training course?

  • You can train these things with the help of a really good mentor or trainer. Using books and videos will help also. After all you got to start somewhere. Keep in mind that you will make many mistakes along the way.
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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Dog Health Questions: Does anyone know about Don Sullivan's dog training methods?

I'm considering buying the dvd, however his website doesn't provide enough information and I'd like to know a little more before spending the money. Specifically, does he use punishment?

Free Dog Training Tip - Proven Tips To Train Your Dog



Recommended Answer:
I'd recommend taking your dog to a class. That way you can have feedback and hands-on help with YOUR dog.

Check out the website for the Association of Pet Dog Trainers:

http://www.APDT.com

Best Dog Training Book - Attention Dog Lovers, Read This Now


  • Hi!

    He is not known as a positive trainer, I can tell you that. According to his website he uses what he's trademarked as the Command Collar which I would assume is his polite way of referring to a shock/e-collar but appears to be some type of prong collar.

    His site also refers to "correcting" and "off-leash control" and refers to housetraining as "housebreaking"...all terms we don't use in the positive dog training world.

    Also, usually any trainer who guarantees the dog will learn within minutes...usually referring to unproofed obedience "commands" incorporates aversives and positive punishment and corrections.

    This is not a system I would recommend. I see no where that this "system" is going to be a positive experience for the dog. I see that he is completely against using treats ever.

    He also compares "new-aged training methods" with how dogs communicate with each other. If we needed to communicate with our dogs on their level, they could train each other. This theory makes no sense.

    His site also states that it doesn't take much time to train a dog using his methods. What's the point? Dog owners today want a quick-fix but to who's expense?? The pets!

    I could go on and on but I believe that if you read between the lines on his site, you will see that his training "system" is punishment/correction based.

    I suggest you do a search on positive dog training, join trulydogfriendly at Yahoo groups, research Dr. Ian Dunbar, Pat Miller CPDT, Paul Owens, Karen Pryor, buy some training books from Dogwise.com and you'll find that there are much more satisfying and effective training methods for those of us who want to succeed in a positive way as well as create a strong, working bond with our pets.

    Good Luck!
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Friday, October 28, 2011

Dog Health Questions: I need questions about dog training?

this question are needed for an outline that I have to do for my graduation project. they are questions I need to answer five of my essential questions I have.. this are my essential questions
I need at least 2 per question pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeee
What's the best way to train a dog?
How does one make a dog obey?
What kind of training your a dog needs?
How to make sure a dog is in a good shape?
What you should you do if your dog goes out of control?
How do you know your dog is sick?

Dog Training Advice For Training Your Best Friend



Recommended Answer:
i would say the best way to train a dog is patience, time, and little treats like little pieces of chicken or little dog treats. For the dog to obey that would go along with the training process, you need to train him for him to obey your commands and listen to you. For the dogs shape you shouldn't be able to see bones but also he shouldn't look like a balloon. They have charts out there and some vets have them hanging up what your dog should look like. As far as the out of control one, my dog has never been out of control but i would say either try to get him in control and that goes along with training or some people bring there dog to obedience classes. If your dog is sick you usually know, either they throw up, they have a loose stool, and you know your dog best so sometimes if they act funny like not themselves that could be a sign. But i knew this little kid who got his first puppy and it seemed a little skinny but depending on the dog sometimes they look that way. but he was always playing and seemed fine until they brought him to the vet and he had liver failer and ended up dying from it. So not all the time people are able to tell with signs if its something internal unless the dog is in a lot of pain.

Using a Dog Training Harness to Train Your Dog


  • Every one of these questions can be found online by doing a google search. You can also go to your local library and find a basic training book. Finding the answers for yourself is the best way to do your project.

  • Buy a dog book. http://dogclasses.org has good reviews of some quality books.

  • Shouldn't you be doing this yourself as it is a GRADUATION project

  • Hi,
    Hope that this will help you:

    Dog training begins with admitting poor dog behavior. This extends from just using the toilet in the house to other bad issues such as chewing, jumping, and wandering off. You will want to teach your pet to stay with you. Listen to your commands, and respond to your wishes quick. Doing this will enable you to control how your dog behaves and whether he or she will listen to you when you tell them to stop.

    The best way to get your dog to listen to you is to use the reward system. Each time your puppy does what you tell him or her to, give the pup a cookie. This incentive will have your dog listening to you intently. With each reward also give praise. This way you can phase treats out and simply give praise for good behavior.

    The Potty Problem

    When your dog is using your home as a toilet, things can be tense. No one wants to be cleaning up after their dog forever inside. There are many ways dog training can enable you to control where your dog goes to the bathroom. First you will need to evaluate your dog's age and health status. If you have a puppy that is healthy, it is safe to say that you are simply teaching your dog where the potty is and how to communicate to you it is time to go.

    If your dog is over a year old and using your home as a toilet, there might be some other issues. He might be nervous, abused in the past, or sick. Older dogs that are not using the outside for toilet use should be seen by a vet prior to beginning any type of training. Once a good bill of health is given you can then use behavior modification to fix the problem.
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Thursday, September 8, 2011

Dog Health Questions: Dog Training?

I have a lab puppy. He gets really excited and what not and I would like to know what I should do to train him like a seeing eye dog. I feel that these dogs are very smart and that if I train him to be a seeing eye dog it would help me in many situations even though I'm not blind. Also How long would it take me to train him? He is only 5 months old. Any help? List tips and websites to help me please!

Dog Training Tips and Tricks - Ways to Make Dog Training Easy For You and Your Pet



Recommended Answer:
It's normal for a lab puppy to be really active. Most people who train a dog as a seeing eye dog do it to give the dog to a person who is blind. The only thing I can suggest is to try and look up one of those organizations and make contact with the volunteers to see if they'll give you tips on how to train him. I believe that first you have to train him really well in normal obedience. He has to be extremely reliable. That is his first year. Then you spend another year teaching him stuff only seeing eye dogs do.

Dog Training Man's Best Friend


  • 1) Not every dog can be trained to be a guide dog or assistance dog. The personality trait of the animal matters. You say that your dog has excitability issues. He would be rejected as a guide dog.

    2) As this is not a REAL guide dog and you have no disability, you would not be able to take the dog places that guide dogs go, so I hope that isn't what you are thinking of.

    3) Guide dogs go through over a year of careful training.

    You can still train your dog to be a good and obedient dog, but he will never be a guide dog.

  • Service dogs are put into a foster home until they are more than a year old. Then they go through rigorous testing to see if they will be selected for training. Training is done by professionals and takes 1 to 2 years. At this time, even if they complete training, they could wash out. Not all dogs of a breed are meant to be service dogs. Like some are good hunters and other are not. Three things are really required from a pet dog. They are: 1. Don't jump up on guests.
    2. Don't sniff crotches and 3. Come when you are called....no matter what. If you can teach your pet these three things, you got it made.
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