Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
The Canine Good Citizen (CGC) program, established in 1989, is an American Kennel Club program to promote responsible dog ownership and to encourage the training of well-mannered dogs. A dog and handler team must take a short behavioral evaluation of less than half an hour; dogs who pass the evaluation earn the Canine Good Citizen certificate, which many people represent after the dog's name, abbreviating it as CGC; for example, "Fido, CGC".
For our March training assignment we thought it would be a great idea for "our Doodle trainers" to select items from the CGC evaluation criteria. Many of us are already working towards acquiring a CGC certification, so it seems to make sense that we would want our assignment to be in line with our goals. Nancy posted the CGC objectives in an earlier discussion, and I've restated them here. You may want to select a few "challenges" from this list to work towards during the month of March. Let us know what you'll be concentrating on, and as always please share your progress throughout the month.
The evaluation consists of ten objectives. All items must be completed satisfactorily or the team fails. Test items include:
Evaluators sometimes combine elements during the actual test.
If all ten objectives are met, the handler can apply for a certificate and special dog tag from the AKC stating that the dog has earned the CGC.
Dogs do not have to be registered with the AKC to earn a CGC, nor do they have to be purebred or, in fact, registered with any canine organization. The goal is to promote good citizenship for all dogs.
Since its inception, the CGC program has become the model for similar programs around the world, is the backbone of other exams, such as those given for therapy dogs, and is a good starting point for more advanced dog training.
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HELP:
Yesterday Peri had the walk from hell. Sorry for the language, but really. DH and I took the dogs (I handle Peri always) on a walk in the beautiful sunny weather. The first .75 mile was awful. Literally, I think she had regressed. I had treats and was using all the "heel" techniques (which I thought she was really getting the hang of!). She was terrible. I think it took us 30 minutes to not even go a mile. However, she sat everytime a dog passed and stayed focused on me. She was almost perfect. At LEAST 12 dogs passed us (we walk on a pedestrian greenway).
The 2nd half of the walk, after we turned around to return home, Peri was PERFECT. What in the world? Seriously, we turned around and she heeled 99% of the way back. Looking at me, smiling, etc...
What is that about? She is going to fail CGC because of walking and nothing else.
How exactly was she terrible? Was her heel bad or was she straining at the end of the leash? Remember the CGC does NOT require heeling. So if she walks a foot ahead or behind it won't matter. What they want to see is you're not being pulled around, she's not acting crazy, and you work together. So you can walk and talk to her every single step you take, make kissy sounds, clap your hands or thigh, encourage, etc.
As far as 'regression' -- sometimes dogs just have off days for whatever reason. The important thing is how YOU responded and that you were consistent and given that it took you 30 minutes to get anywhere, it sounds like you implemented things consistently and didn't just walk regardless of her response to your commands.
Attending the shelter's annual walk around the lake fund raiser allowed us to really work on walking through crowds, meeting strangers, and while I registered - a stranger held Ned. I was in sight sort of but with hundreds of people there, it was pretty much like I was not. So we can check that off our list except we do need to make sure we practice the time lengths. Ned doesn't like some boxers. He reacted to one at the park recently and yesterday also. He had a female boxer in his class and he saw a second boxer yesterday that he was fine with. I am wondering if perhaps the two he didn't like were intact males perhaps???
PS there was another horse there - miniature. Our guys were fine with it. I am glad they met one in class as a distraction.
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