
This is a placeholder text
Group text
by Nans gsd on 01 February 2016 - 22:02
Also the "COME" command or whatever you might use for that "recall"...
What is your most effective correction if the dog does not come to you immediately?? Lolly gags along but finally comes to you at his free will, that is after repeating the command several times, then finally they decide to do it. Do you reward with cookie, "good boy" or whatever? Or do you want to kick their behind but know not to as the come is so vitally important or do you put them in their crate which is where you wanted them in the first place "after the doorbell rang" and they wanted to answer it...
Well as you can probably tell, I am beyond frustrated. This is a young adult male 2 1/2 years old, KNOWS BETTER. Now I am upset. Thx Nan

by Hundmutter on 01 February 2016 - 22:02
more to a dawg than the handler using the same word
over and over again; they can hear the frustration that
builds in your voice, and the reaction is "this is quite
good fun, I can say 'up yours' to that !" Repetition of any
command just gives the dog the idea that it does not have
to obey the first time the word is said ...
What DO I do ? Apart from always making it worth the
dog's while to respond to me EVERY time I call them in, if
something "more interesting" than me crops up and gets
the dog's attention, I walk briskly away in the other direction.
And mean it. They do eventually decide you really are
abandoning them, their meal-ticket is fading into the distance,
and they better come running.
I do not allow a dog off leash anywhere I cannot get it back to
me safely (i.e. without disappearing over the distant horizon,
in pursuit of a rabbit or whatever), and without risking it to traffic,
until I am sure I HAVE got at least a 99.9% Recall happening.
To ensure that, I always train at first in enclosed spaces.
And the old Training saw applies: teach the dog the exercise; test
it for as many hours / weeks as it takes to make sure the dog
understands the exercise; then teach it the exercise / command for
an additional fortnight, even though you are sure the dog has "got"
it.
Hope there is something helpful in there somewhere Nan !
by Nans gsd on 01 February 2016 - 23:02

by Hundmutter on 01 February 2016 - 23:02
Oh, one more point: nobody likes to feel they are
rewarding a dog that has just, finally, come back -
don't want to send the dog the message it has done
the right thing by being so slow ! But I meant that
I always reward, every time ... no matter what method
you use, praise / play / food, the dog gets it for returning
because that is more effective than NOT praising the
return (or, worse, offering that kick up the bum !) BUT
the dog, on return, has to do another command first -
I find a minute or two Down Stay useful in that context.
So then: dog is reminded you are the source of reward;
dog has still had to obey a command.
You might want to try teaching "Go into that room /
place / crate" as a separate exercise from a general
Recall from distance. Then you can break it down
into different smaller steps with praise/cuddles/food
(maybe less so toys/Fetch indoors, LOL) as specific
indoor control ?
by hntrjmpr434 on 02 February 2016 - 10:02
by Nans gsd on 02 February 2016 - 17:02
by hntrjmpr434 on 02 February 2016 - 17:02
I see slow recalls a lot with my pet dog clients, dog is either always put in a crate, yelled at once he does recall, or yelled at to do a recall, so he takes his time coming back.
Good luck!
by Nans gsd on 02 February 2016 - 17:02

by Jenni78 on 02 February 2016 - 19:02
Bringing you his favorite ball was for him, not you. Sounds like we need to go back to the basics...he's doing whatever he wants and you're allowing it- however unwittingly ;)
by Nans gsd on 03 February 2016 - 18:02
Hntr: Also thank you for your assistance. Nan
Contact information Disclaimer Privacy Statement Copyright Information Terms of Service Cookie policy ↑ Back to top