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Saturday, September 7, 2013
Do you have a dog that growls at you if you
happen to get to close to her food? If you do….you have a ‘resource guarder’.
This behaviour often starts in young pups and can get worse as the dog gets
older. It will not go away without some training. Dogs that resource guard can
be especially dangerous to children.
Dogs by nature are scavengers that hunt for
food or find food sources. They tend to think that if they have it, then it is
theirs and they will protect it.
Obedience can play a big role in solving this
issue.
Start today to get your dog to sit on
command. Then start to ask the dog to sit before you put down an empty bowl.
Have a leash on the dog for greater control.
Then place a very small amount of food into the bowl. When the dog is
finished, use the leash to call the puppy away from the bowl. Tell the pup to
sit again and add some more food. Make the dog sit until you tell her it is OK
and let her go to eat again. If the dog shows any sign of aggression at all,
make her sit again and take the food away.
Once she seems to be getting better with
her food, hold onto the food bowl while she is eating and occasionally add
something a bit more tasty so the dog learns that you are not a threat to her
food.
If this aggression is also occurring with
toys, remove all the toys but one. When the dog has a toy, offer her a trade
for her toy. The trade has to be a trade up for the dog. In other words, if the
dog has a high value toy like a stuffed animal then you have to offer a very
tasty but small piece of meat. You can start using a word for this, like trade
or give and then you should be able to use that word to get your dog to give
you whatever it has. Don’t nag the dog with this though or it may revert back
to guarding things.
Dogs with a tendency to resource guarding
should be on some sort of a leadership program. That means that they get
nothing…not even petting without having to do something for the reward. So if
your dog butts your hand asking for a pet, say sit first and wait till the dog
sits before petting.
Your dog should not be allowed on furniture
(some dogs will guard their place on the furniture) and should sit at the door
before being allowed outside. If this problem persists after the age of 5
months, you need to get professional help.
Positive Only Training – you be the judge.
I have written before in this column about
positive only training and other types of training, using a leash and collar
and also using an e-collar. I am not a huge fan of using positive only
training.
I have to tell you a secret. I train my own
dogs for different kinds of competition. I compete very successfully in
competitive obedience. One of my personal dogs became the first dog in our club
to become an obedience champion in over 25 years. I also compete in Rally
Obedience and to some degree in field training.
So I can hear what you are thinking as you
read this. It goes something like this “I don’t compete with my dog….my dog is
just a pet. So I don’t need all that really great obedience”. Well the truth of
the matter is, there are no kids in the competition ring that are walking
around with cookies or toddlers to knock over. Folks, competition obedience is
a lot easier than pet dog obedience. Competition obedience has no squirrels
running by or deer grazing off in the field. There is only you, your dog, the
judge and a very sterile environment.
Go to an obedience trial and ask those
people how they train their dogs. Go to a field event and ask them how they
train their dogs. Most of those people will tell you that while they do use a
lot of positive in their training, they do use correction based training as
well. These events unlike events like agility and flyball require a very
obedient dog. You require an obedient dog. Don’t accept anything less.
You as a dog owner need to know what kind
of dog training you want for your family pet. Unless you are going to be
competing with your dog in a sport like agility or flyball, you should be
expecting the obedience course that you are attending to provide you with an obedient
dog at the end.
Beware of classes that say Beginner level
one, Beginner level two, Novice level one, Novice level two. These are classes
designed to keep you and your money coming back in a never ending scenario
while you live with a partially trained dog.
If you enjoy taking classes and you want to
eventually do what I do and compete with your dog…then you have to take classes
over and over but your beginner level class should provide you with all the
skills that you require to train your dog to a basic level of obedience in one
set of lessons. Your dog should be able to perform basic level obedience by the
age of one year. Please don’t accept less!
One of the most common things that I hear
in class is “I have to go to work in the morning and I can never get my dog to
come back into the house when I say ‘come.’”. Dogs that start this have learned
a few things about ‘come’. First of all the
dog has learned that when he hears the word come something that he does not
want to do is going to happen to him. So when you call ‘come’ in the morning,
his fun ends and he gets left in the house all day. He has also learned that
when you say ‘come’ you can’t really make him come so the word has become
meaningless to your dog.
My suggestion is that you let your dog out
in the morning and let him drag a long line about 15 to 25 feet long. Make sure
that the dog is only wearing a flat collar that he can’t back out of and keep
an eye on him while he is out there doing his business. Allow yourself a few
extra minutes and when you call him use a different word such as ‘here’. Pick
up the long line and call his name and say ‘here’ and then turn and walk back a
few steps carefully so you don’t trip. When he gets to you turn around so that
he is now in front of you and give him a little treat. It should be a really
wonderful treat such as a bit of meat or wiener. Then take him off for a little
walk. Even a five minute walk will make the act of coming to you seem like a
more worthwhile effort to the dog. When you do end up leaving for work, leave
the dogs a stuffed Kong to keep it busy while you leave.
Training a dog can be a lifelong endeavor
depending on what you want your dog to do. A dog under the age of two should
not be left outside without a line. That way you can enforce what you really
want your dog to do.
If you call your dog to come, make sure
that there is something in it for the dog. Don’t call the dog to come when you
want to clip the dog’s nails or give it a bath or lock it in a crate. Doing so
is just encouraging the dog not to come when called.
Friday, August 30, 2013
A recent discussion on a dog training email list got me to
thinking about some issues that are currently tearing the dog training world
apart.
The comment from the email list was from an obedience judge
with over 30 years of judging experience. She was commenting on the general
lack of obedience that is currently being seen in competition level dogs and
wondered if this was due to the changes in training methodology over the past
15 to 20 years.
She felt that even the highest examples of dogs…those
trained to compete in the highly disciplined sport of competitive obedience
were no longer able to perform reliably because of a lack of consequences.
I have to agree with her on this one. However a lot of
people went on to say that dogs should not be trained with consequences…. they
should only be rewarded for good behaviour and all bad behaviour should be
ignored. Saying no to your dog is not acceptable. One responder even went so
far as to suggest that we employ standards from the Children’s Aid and make it
illegal to even walk a dog with the leash pulled tight.
Perhaps this might work if you are single, don’t work, don’t
have anything else do and there are no children in the house and you devote
your entire day to training the dog.
Somehow I just can’t imagine this working for a working mom
with 3 kids. Having a dog around that is constantly knocking over a two year is
going to be a big problem if all mom can do is reward it for being good.
These trainers make claims that training dogs with
consequences are going to cause aggression in dogs. Balderdash! The opposite is
the case. In a lifetime of training dogs and using consequences that has never
been the case here.
It is also true everywhere in Nature. Consequences for
making bad choices are part of everyday life, no matter if you are a bad driver
or a deer crossing a busy highway. Even among barn yard animals there exists a
hierarchy and a consequence will occur if a certain horse ventures too close to
the best hay or grain.
A mother with 3 little kids and a dog can afford the time to
ignore bad behaviour waiting for good behaviour to occur. She needs the
behaviour to stop in a timely manner. If we as dog trainers fail to provide her
with a solution we are failing both her and the dog. We will leave her with no
other choice but to re-home the dog or surrender it to the shelter.
Insisting on good behaviour from your dog will not cause
aggression in your dog. Saying no to your dog will not cause aggression or
destroy its self confidence.
Balance - A harmonious or satisfying arrangement or
proportion of parts or elements, as in a design.
We strive for balance in our lives. We balance our jobs with
our recreation time. Excesses are often considered undesirable. We seek a
balanced diet, a balanced exercise program. We often tolerate extremes for a
period of time but eventually sanity prevails and we return to the middle of
the road.
Should it not be so with dogs? I believe that it should be. It
is my firm belief that dogs need to be trained in a balanced manner. This
article will be about how I train my dogs and my clients dogs. I have had
enormous success with using both food training and correction type training.
Each individual
dog trainer is the product of their own experiences, resulting in a potpourri of
methods, tools and theories. Some trainers will call themselves totally positive,
some are pure positive and some are traditional. Some will call another
trainer’s methods abusive while some will call the all reward method confusing
for both dog and owner.
Often in these
situations, the truth lies somewhere in the middle. So it is with dog training.
The middle is balanced. I personally
think that there is something of value in all styles of training.
Many
traditional dog trainers have come to see the value of better timing in their
training and the addition of food in some situations. They have created balance in their approach.
My belief is
that a good quality obedience program opens the lines of communications both
ways between canine and human. There has to be balance in the communication.
The owner does have to make an effort to be clear to the dog about what is
expected from the dog. The dog has to be prepared to pay attention to what the
owner is trying to say.
For some dogs
it is their lack of attention to the owner that creates most of the problems.
You can never train any dog if you do not have attention from the dog.
Basic obedience
training should create attention. With this attention the dog is primed for
learning new things. For the dog this is the stage where it begins to learn the
‘rules’. It learns impulse control. It learns how to behave in a variety of
situations with distractions. As it learns, it learns to pay more attention and
it learns even more rules. Learning the rules gives the dog more self
confidence and better behaviour. It also gives the dog more freedom. You would
be more confident taking a dog that is well behaved with you on walks and on
vacations. This gives the dog more and more freedom and results in a much more
pleasant life for both you and your dog.
Recently there
was a discussion on the CAPPDT email list about what constitutes a correction.
I understand that many people are very opposed to a correction and feel that
waiting until the dog “offers the right behaviour” is the way to go and perhaps
in many situations this will work just fine. However time is a precious
commodity in today’s world where moms and dads juggle full time jobs and kids
with soccer, hockey and piano lessons. The dog is often very low on the totem
pole. They need to have a full dialogue with their dog that includes all 4
quadrants of learning. Corrections should always be ‘just right’ and never
cause fear. Sometimes the most subtle correction will work just fine and for
some dog a firmer correction will be required. Rules and discipline must also
be very fair and consistent.
I often use an
analogy with my own clients. You and your dog need to play by the rule book…but
it works best if the owner writes the rule book. If the rule book is the dog’s
then you are both in trouble.
Those dog
trainers who say that saying ‘no’ to your dog is going to ruin your dog and
result in a fearful quivering mass are lying to you. In my life time I have
trained hundreds of dogs as have other trainers I know. Not a single fearful
dog has resulted. Because the training was fair!
There is no balance in only saying ‘yes’ to
your dog. It is a failure to communicate with your dog. Only saying yes gives
your dog only half the information that it needs to survive in the world it
lives in. You owe it to your dog to give it a balanced life and more self
confidence….give him some clear rules applied with kindness, firmness and
praise. Your dog will love you for it.
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