Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
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If you're going to be away and will need to take them on walks together then I'd purchase some kind of control device like a 'no pull harness' or 'head halter' or 'prong' collar to keep them from pulling. These won't train them at all but give you more control and decrease their pulling.
But as soon as this trip is over, signing up for a class for the puppy would be a VERY good idea and then training each of them separately until you are VERY confident in their ability to walk near distractions individually. By then the 10 month old will be past a year old and possibly with the rest of the training will be overall more manageable. And the 15 month old will be more mature too. I don't know if there is some transition period but I think there might be some adjustment needed if either of them is still a little shaky on walking near distractions.
What do you walk them in? Prongs, flat? halters? In the best of all worlds I think you should walk them separately unless you can find isolated spots with no busy roads, etc. How about doing a dog park search ahead of time for your trip?
It is possible to get two dogs to walk together without too much threat to you. But both need to be reasonable on a leash singly and I think should be in prong collars for all of your protection. Most dogs will only hit a prong collar once or twice at the most to chase a squirrel and they are cured. This does not mean they will heel perfectly just that you have removedthe threat of being dragged 50 yards or them getting loose. I do not think of this as punishment, but a natural consequence of bad behavior. Of course, I have practiced with them just making a 180 degree turn first so the dog knows what is there.
I am nearly 65, have a compromised nerve in my back, sciatica, and am small (5'4"). I can walk my son's huskies, all three in prongs with a coupler for two and a leash for the older dog. I can walk Roo and Tigger for a total of 100 pounds tied to my waist. Roo and Tigger were both adequate on a leash when I started walking them together, one on each side. I switched to a waistbelt/ leash holder - one on each side - because it really reduces the lateral and twisting strain on my back even if they are both walking quietly.
I now walk them together except when I am taking a class with them and want to work individually. They were only adequate, not anything like good, when I started walking them together. My secret weapon is always have very high value - think smelly- treats in my pocket and they know it. This has gotten through many tight spots.
Hope you have an excellent trip.
This is what my trainers advice was and it worked great for Kai and I. On the squirrel issue, you try to spot them first and get his attention with a high quality treat, chicken, hot dogs, cheese cubes in my case, or whatever he absolutely loves. Just walk him past it by holding the treat in your left side and letting him nibble on it while you walk past the squirrel using your attention word with him. You can also say "leave it" if he spots the squirrel first and everytime he looks at you treat him. On the walking issue, I started using the Gentle Leader and I was amazed at how different our walks are today.. I have been using the martingale collar lately so we can get use to it without pulling..so I can pass the CGC test in the future. GL's are not allowed, but has helped train Kai to walk better along my side instead of pulling the entire time...we are easing into the other collar. The GL was a gift for me, I am 58 and know exactly how difficult it can be with one dog much less two. Good luck...Jennifer
Great discussion for me to read! I am working on walking my two together... it is going way better than I thought it would... BUT I have them both in gentle leaders. Sam does OK walking without one (not great, but pretty good and probably great if I have decent treats on me which sometimes I don't because it is a last minute - "wanna run to the mailbox with me?" type of walk...) But Mojo is new to us and has had no formal training so walking him is still work... but the GL does wonders! He still doesn't really make eye contact well or check in with me well like Sam does -- way too into looking around... but on the GL he at least doesn't pull and walks well with us.
I am taking them together due to the bad rainy weather and my lack of interest in going out twice in it! But I get that they need work alone too. I walk them both on my left, in GLs with two leads... I don't yet own a coupler or anything and I like the idea of a waist type connector -- need to look into that. I may start taking Sam again with me running since he has been doing so well lately on lead. I swear for him, he is BETTER behaved because of the other dog -- like he wants to really prove he is my favorite or something. Ha!
I really need to talk to my trainer about the whole transitioning from a GL to a flat collar plan...
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