Monday 27 July 2015

Establish the Toilet Area

With These Insider Dog Training Secrets, Those Naughty Dog Behaviors Will Be A Thing Of The Past. It Has Worked For So Many Others, It Will Work For You Too...click here




There are two things you can do to set your dog up for successful house training. First, establish your dog's living area we will call it 'den' from here out in a small confined space such as a bathroom, part of the kitchen or garage. Please note that a den is not a crate. See our article on crate training for more information on this. Try to spend as much time as possible with your dog in her den. It is important to play with her in this area as well as let her eat and sleep here. Give your dog a special bed; this can be anything from an open crate to a large cardboard box to a beach towel. In the beginning, she may eliminate in here but once she realizes that this is her special den, she will try to avoid soiling it.

Once your dog gets used to sleeping on her very own bed, you can move it around your house from room to room, where ever you go. Confine your dog to her bed when ever you are somewhere other than her den. If her bed is a crate, simply close the door. If her bed is a towel or blanket, place it next to a piece of furniture and leash your dog so she can't get out of her bed.

Since you should never leave your dog unattended while leashed, it's an even better idea to leash your dog to yourself! Tie one end of the leash around your waist or belt loop. Now your dog can accompany you around your home and you can monitor her behavior.

Establish the Toilet Area

Second, establish your dog's toilet area. Every time your dog needs to eliminate be sure she has access to this place. Until she develops a strong habit of eliminating here, it is important that you accompany her every time. If she eliminates some where else, then she'll be establishing a habit of eliminating there.

To make things easier on both yourself and your dog, you should put your dog on a regular feeding schedule. What goes in on a regular schedule will come out on a regular schedule. If you know when your dog needs to empty out, then you'll know when to take her to her toilet area. Healthy adult dogs should be able to control their bladder and bowels for eight hours.

"It's important that you do" not confine your dog without access to her toilet area for too long. If she can't hold it, she will be forced to soil herself, her bed or her den. If this happens, it may become a habit and will take much longer to house train her.

With These Insider Dog Training Secrets, Those Naughty Dog Behaviors Will Be A Thing Of The Past. It Has Worked For So Many Others, It Will Work For You Too...click here

Friday 24 July 2015

tricks to Teach Your Dog

With These Insider Dog Training Secrets, Those Naughty Dog Behaviors Will Be A Thing Of The Past. It Has Worked For So Many Others, It Will Work For You Too...clickhere 

dog to Teach Your Dog 

Trouble: Easy 

Essential: None 

Things Needed: Clicker, Treats 

Dogtrainking.blogspot.com suggests Clicker Training for your canine. This is a basic yet exceedingly viable technique, the normal canine proprietor as a top priority. You don't have to know much about pooch preparing to utilize this system. 

Essentially, you need to "catch" great conduct with the clicker. This means you need to prepare your canine that at whatever point you click (which implies he has done something great.) The way we prepare the puppy to react to the clicker is just by clicking and instantly treating the pooch. It won't take your canine long to comprehend that at whatever point he hears the clicker he'll get a treat. This is a crucial stride in clicker preparing your pooch. Another term that we will utilize is big stake. This is an additional prize that you give your pooch, as a rule when he has done incredibly well or performed the trap flawlessly surprisingly. 

Step 1: Click and give your dog a treat. 

Step 2: Repeat around 30 times. This shows your dog to relate the snap with the treat. 

Step 3: To keep up this association, it is essential to take after the principle: Never click without treating and never treat without clicking. We have one special case to this essential control in the Come summon

With These Insider Dog Training Secrets, Those Naughty Dog Behaviors Will Be A Thing Of The Past. It Has Worked For So Many Others, It Will Work For You Too...clickhere 

Tuesday 21 July 2015

Top Ten Dog Training Tips

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LISTEN TO YOUR DOG
Learn to listen to your dog. If your dog appears to be uncomfortable meeting another dog, animal or person, don’t insist that he say hello. He’s telling you that he isn’t comfortable for a reason, and you should respect that. Forcing the issue can often result in bigger problems down the line.

BE GENEROUS WITH YOUR AFFECTION
Most people don’t have a problem being very clear about when they are unhappy with their dogs, but, they often ignore the good stuff. Big mistake! Make sure you give your dog lots of attention when he’s doing the right thing. Let him know when he’s been a good boy. That’s the time to be extra generous with your attention and praise. It’s even okay to be a little over the top.

DOES HE REALLY LIKE IT?
Just because the bag says “a treat all dogs love” doesn’t mean your dog will automatically love it. Some dogs are very selective about what they like to eat. Soft and chewy treats are usually more exciting for your dog than hard and crunchy treats. Keep your eyes open for what he enjoys.

TELL HIM WHAT YOU WANT HIM TO DO
There is nothing inherently wrong with telling your dog “no,” except that it doesn’t give him enough information. Instead of telling your dog “no,” tell him what you want him to do. Dogs don’t generalize well, so if your dog jumps up on someone to say hello and you say no, he may jump higher or he may jump to the left side instead of the right. A better alternative would be to ask him to “sit.” Tell him what you want him to do in order to avoid confusion.

BE CONSISTENT
Whenever you’re training your dog, it’s important to get as many family members involved as possible so everyone’s on the same page. If you are telling your dog “off” when he jumps on the couch and someone else is saying “down,” while someone else is letting him hang out up there, how on earth is he ever going to learn what you want? Consistency will be the key to your success.

HAVE REALISTIC EXPECTATIONS
Changing behavior takes time. You need to have realistic expectations about changing your dog’s behavior as well as how long it will take to change behaviors that you don’t like. Often behaviors which are “normal” doggie behaviors will take the most time such as barking, digging and jumping. You also need to consider how long your dog has rehearsed the behavior. For example, if you didn’t mind that your dog jumped up on people to say hi for the last seven years and now you decide that you don’t want him to do that anymore, that behavior will take a much longer time to undo than if you had addressed it when he was a pup. Remember it’s never too late to change the behavior some will just take longer than others.

DON’T UNDERESTIMATE THE BENEFITS OF FEEDING A HIGH QUALITY FOOD
Feed your dog a high-quality diet with appropriate amounts of protein. If your dog spends most of his days lounging in your condo, don’t feed him food with a protein level that is ideal for dogs who herd sheep all day. The money that you will spend on feeding an appropriate quality food will often be money that you save in vet bills later on. I recommend you always check with your veterinarian for the right diet for your dog.

YOU GET WHAT YOU REINFORCE – NOT NECESSARILY WHAT YOU WANT
If your dog exhibits a behavior you don’t like, there is a strong likelihood that it’s something that has been reinforced before. A great example is when your dog brings you a toy and barks to entice you to throw it. You throw the toy. Your dog has just learned that barking gets you to do what he wants. You say “no,” and he barks even more. Heaven forbid you give in and throw the toy now! Why? Because you will have taught him persistence pays off. Before you know it you’ll have a dog that barks and barks every time he wants something. The solution? Ignore his barking or ask him to do something for you (like “sit”) before you throw his toy.

BRIBERY VS. REWARD
The idea of using treats to train is often equated with bribery. Truthfully, dogs do what works. If using treats gets them to do what you want, then why not? You can also use the world around you as a reinforcement. Every interaction you have with your dog is a learning opportunity, so when you think about it, you probably don’t use food very often except during active training sessions. So why does your dog continue to hang out? Because you reinforce him with praise, touch, games and walks. Just remember, the behavior should produce the treat; the treat should not produce the behavior.
FREEDOM
Let your new dog gradually earn freedom throughout your home. A common error that many pet parents make is giving their new dog too much freedom too soon. This can easily lead to accidents relating to housetraining and destructive chewing. So, close off doors to unoccupied rooms and use baby gates to section off parts of the house, if necessary. One of the best ways to minimize incidents is to keep your dog tethered to you in the house and by using a crate or doggie safe area when you can’t actively supervise him.

Sunday 19 July 2015

The Benefits of Training

The benefits of having a trained dog are nearly limitless! From 

the moment you get your new puppy or dog, here’s a run-down 

of just some of the advantages and benefits:

Puppy classes provide the opportunity for getting your new 

family member started off right. Puppy classes provide the 

experiences and opportunities for your puppy to develop 

interaction skills with other puppies, with people, and in new 

environments.
Puppy socialization has been found to be critical to the 

psychological health of adult dogs. Puppy classes provide the 

opportunity for this important facet of your puppy’s 

upbringing.
Training classes provide dog owners the skills and knowledge 

for dealing with common, normal dog behaviors—starting with 

puppy behaviors such as housetraining and chewing.
No matter what age you start training your dog, foundation 

training provides the basis for any activity, behavior or job you 

want your dog to do.
Training provides dogs with the basic good manners we all 

want—from polite greeting when guests arrive, to walking 

nicely on the leash, to coming when called.
A trained dog is a fully participating member of the family—

what a gift for all of you!
A trained dog joins in the fun when company comes, 

accompanies the family to the kids’ sports games, goes with you 

to visit friends and relatives, goes for hikes, swims, and 

everything else the family does together.

Training enables you to choose from among a broad range of 

activities and dog sports to participate in and enjoy with your 

dog such as dog agility, Rally-obedience, dancing with your 

dog, tracking, search & rescue, skijoring, sledding, water 

rescue trials, obedience, carting, reading programs, therapy 

work, and a nearly endless range of fun and philanthropic 

things to do!
Training has been shown to be the single most important thing 

that keeps a dog in his or her “forever” home.
Training builds your mutual bond, enhances the partnership 

and enriches the relationship you share with your dog. Is there 

anything better?
Having a trained dog is a joy for both you and your dog!

Wednesday 10 June 2015

change your dog behavior in easy days



A growing collection of recent studies is proving that positive reinforcement training of dogs is much more effective and ultimately successful than training involving and punishment
Some of the studies even demonstrated that training involving punishment actually created additional problem behaviours – certainly an outcome no dog guardian deliberately sets out to achieve.

Behavior Training That Hurts Rather Than Helps

A study titled “The importance of consistency in the training of dogs”was conducted at the University of Southampton in the UK and the University of Life Sciences in Norway. It was published in the Journal of Veterinary Behaviour: Clinical Applications and Research in May 2007.
The purpose of the study was to determine whether punishment was a risk factor for problem behaviors, and the combined effect on obedience and specific problem behaviors of reward, punishment, attitudes and rule structure. Rule structure is defined as permissiveness vs. strictness, and consistency in applying rules.
The study showed that punishment correlates negatively with obedience and positively with training problems. Rule structure, including consistency of the owners, was associated with higher levels of obedience and less training problems.
In another study conducted at the University of Bristol in the UK and published in the September-October 2008 Journal of Veterinary Behavior: Clinical Applications and Research, results suggest dogs trained only with positive reinforcement exhibited fewer problem behaviors. And dogs whose owners used punishment in training were much more likely to show a fear response to other dogs.
Additional Positive Reinforcement Training Studies
·         A study titled “Behavior of smaller and larger dogs: Effects of training methods, inconsistency of owner behavior and level of engagement in activities with the dog” and published in March 2010 showed that increased anxiety and fear was related to a more frequent use of punishment in smaller dogs.
The researchers concluded smaller dog owners can significantly improve obedience in their pets by being more consistent in interactions and engaging regularly in play and training activities with them. Behavioral problems could be reduced by avoiding habits of punishment that might reinforce fear or fear-related aggression.
·         In a “Survey of the use and outcome of confrontational and non-confrontational training methods in client-owned dogs showing undesired behaviors” conducted at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine and published in early 2009, confrontational methods applied by dog owners before their pets were presented for a behavior consultation were associated with aggressive responses.
The researchers concluded it is important that owners understand the risks associated with such training methods as “hit or kick dog for undesirable behavior” … “growl at dog” … “physically force the release of an item from a dog's mouth” … “alpha roll” … “stare at or stare [dog] down” … “dominance down” … “grab dog by jowls and shake.” These confrontational methods elicited an aggressive response from at least a quarter of the dogs on which they were attempted.
·         In a paper published in 2004 by researchers at the University of Bristol in the UK, it was determined that in the general dog-owning population, dogs trained using punishment are no more obedient than those trained by other means, and, furthermore, they exhibit increased numbers of potentially problematic behaviors.
Because reward-based methods are associated with higher levels of obedience and fewer problematic behaviors, their use is a more effective and welfare-compatible alternative to punishment for the average dog owner.
Positive Reinforcement Dog Training in 5 Simple Steps
The goal is to use very small-sized treats (pea sized is good, and you can even use frozen peas if your dog seems to like them) and verbal praise and affection to encourage desired behaviors in your dog.
·         Come up with short, preferably one-word commands for the behaviors you want to teach your pet. Examples are Come, Sit, Stay, Down, Heel, Off, etc. Make sure all members of your family consistently use exactly the same command for each behavior.
·         As soon as your dog performs the desired behavior, reward him immediately with a treat and verbal praise. Do this every time he responds appropriately to a command. You want him to connect the behavior he performed with the treat. This of course means you’ll need to have treats on you whenever you give your dog commands in the beginning.
·         Keep training sessions short and fun. You want your dog to associate good things with obeying your commands. You also want to use training time as an opportunity to deepen your bond with your pet.
·         Gradually back off the treats and use them only intermittently once your dog has learned a new behavior. Eventually they’ll no longer be necessary, but you should always reward your dog with verbal praise whenever he obeys a command.
·         Continue to use positive reinforcement to maintain the behaviors you desire. Reward-based training helps create a range of desirable behaviors in your pet, which builds mutual feelings of trust and confidence.