spain labrador training

Posts Tagged ‘labrador training’

Labrador worming ctd:

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

So worming your Labrador puppy is extremely important. But that’s not all, it is not just the children of dog owners (or the owners themselves) who are just at risk, but any child in the environment. Imagine an expanse of grass at a local park, or recreational area or a sand pit. If dog stools contaminate that area, and a child crawls through it and eats it then there is an increased risk of the disease spreading.

So the next rule is to clean up behind your dog using a ‘poop scoop’ and bag it. Many communities provide special bins for disposal of this mess. However, clearing up after your dog should not be limited to public places. Since infected dog feces can contaminate the ground for many years, it is worth giving some thought as to whether it is likely that a child (or adult) will get infected if you leave the dog mess where it lies (say, in a wooded, or off-the-beaten-track area).

The third rule is to make sure you wash your hands well and follow common sense hygiene. This not only applies to dog-owners with their own hygiene, but also to parents of children by teaching their child not to eat dirt. This should also include being proactive in teaching them to regularly wash their hands. There are many specialist gels on the market that allow hands to be washed where there are no hand washing facilities, thus helping prevent the spread of these diseases.

Correcting Labrador Behaviour

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Examples of Using Sound to Correct Bad Behavior
As stated earlier, any sound accompanied with praise, is sufficient.
For example: let’s say your dog walks right over to you while your eating dinner, and expects to help himself, without permission, to your food.

If you were to snap your fingers in front of his face and say “good boy, nice dog, what a good dog you are,” you’d feel pretty much like an idiot, until he opened his mouth to grab your food, at which point you’d reach around behind him and snap your fingers again, following through with lavish praise.

If you’re timing and tone of voice were correct, he would have stopped, but yet still be thinking of taking your food without permission. So we expect him to try again to get your food.
As he leans his big wet nose over your plate, and again you were to snap your fingers in front of his nose, and following the procedure, using lavish praise for this horrible mistake, you’ll find him leaning back a little, thinking, thinking, thinking, thinking, thinking, (and find yourself praising, praising, praising).
Now, he’s going to look at your food, then look up at you, then back at the food.
In as much as it goes against everything you’ve ever been lead to believe, you must praise this thought, this learning plateau. You can learn to overcome your natural instincts.
It’s not easy being human. Now we fully expect him to try once again to get your food.
At the moment he begins to make his move, you were to reach around behind him and snap your fingers and speak praises, this should be the last time you need address this behavior, possibly for the rest of your life, or, until you change your location.

Pick up your plate and move to another chair, and your loving pet will try again to steal your food.
Now, begin the procedure again, taking it to its fourth properly performed repetition.
Now, he’ll probably never try to steal your food as long as you sit at either of the two positions at your table that he has been conditioned to.

Taking this example to a third seat at the table, and then to a fourth seat at the table will permanently break this behavior.
That is, until someone else sit there with his or her food in front of him or her. The point is that we will need four people or plate settings at this table to permanently eradicate this behavior. O.K.?

How about if we rearrange the dining room, and move the table to another location? If you figure this to be a “new environment,” you’ve begun to understand how your dog figures it to be.
Now, you know what to do, and how to do it. We had a student call one day, because although things were moving along well with her dog, the dog continued to jump up on the couch.

When asked how does she address the problem, she stated that she reaches over for one of the cans, gives it a shake, and indeed, the dog gets off the couch, but gets back on again shortly thereafter.
“How do you deal with that?” I asked.
“I reach for the cans, and give it another shake, and as always, she gets right off, but gets back on it again shortly thereafter.”
“Don’t you remember that the sound must come from another direction,”
I asked?
“Oh yes, now I remember. Creating the sound will not be effective without alternating the source or direction. Sorry to bother you about that,” she said. “Before you go, tell me, did you continue to do the Family Pack Leadership
Exercise at three other locations, and finish reading the manual?”
I asked.

Other dog control methods

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Our technique actually deletes errors in your dogs thinking.
It takes only a few moments of time to permanently cancel or delete a behavior.
Correcting a behavior takes the entire lifetime of your dog. Make your choice, to solve behavior problems permanently in a few moments, or get the satisfaction of correcting your dogs behavior problems each time they occur, for the entire life of your dog.

When you get tired of correcting, whining, nagging, and arguing, start reading this manual again, follow the directions, and change your values. Change is difficult.
So let’s go back to the prior example using the “other room” command. As you prepare to exit the room after having shown him the meaning of your request, create a sound just before your dog reaches the exit or doorway. As always, instantly praise him.
Continue to exit the room yourself, and if he continues to try to exit, create the sound behind him, and praise again.
If he successfully exits the room against your command, simply repeat the original command “go in the other room good boy”.
Of course, this will be treated as a new request, to be performed according to the progression of events as required.

In other words, you must pay attention to the last instance in which sound was used, and try to insure that in the next instance, the sound comes from the appropriate source, i.e.: if you’re dog went into the “other room” on his first request without sound, perhaps strictly as a coincidence, then, after you’ve tried to correct him from leaving, that instance would require the application of sound with your next request, which in actuality, would be his second request to “go in the other room good boy”.

To review:
first request, “go in the other room, good boy”;
second request; “go in the other ROOM good boy”;
third request “go in the other room, good boy”;
Let’s say he accomplished the request properly.
When he violates the command, your next request to send him back in there would be, in actuality, his fourth request, requiring sound on this command. If you are not thoroughly confused at this point, I’m surprised.
Here’s the rest of the secret:
The sequence of events never starts over again, but always continues from the last instance in which the sound was used.
It is imperative to try to remember the last occasion in which your dog was given a command.

Example: let’s say, he’s out in the back yard.
You call him in, and he fails to respond.
So you reach for the can, and repeat your request accompanied with one hard downward shake to create sound.
Naturally, your dog will respond on this occasion.
Next time that he is out in the yard, -even if it’s the next day, and he fails to respond when you ask him to come in, you’ve got to try to remember when it was, that you last needed to re-enforce the command, using sound.
So you might stop for a moment to think, “gee, wasn’t it just last night, that I asked him to come inside, and failing that, needed to create the sound on my second request for him to come in?”
Did the sound come from my hand, or did the can need to be tossed beyond him.
Follow through thinking this out, and make the right decision. If you can’t remember the last instance, that’s O.K.

Simply do your best, and set yourself an appointment to do the Family Pack Leadership exercise when you plan to re-install the conditioned reflex to “come”. It’ll take about ten minutes.