Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Yesterday was our first class...no dogs for the first session. I had such a great time. This trainer (a woman who has been training for 39 years) is hysterically funny. There are six of us in the class, and we laughed for 90 minutes straight. There was very little discussion of actual "training"....it was mostly her talking in general about dogs. Here are a few of the "tidbits" she had to share...
So, those are just a few "tidbits" from yesterday. Fun stuff...some pretty basic, but some thought provoking. I think her style is totally aligned with my private trainer, so I have no worries about that. He will be around other "reactive" dogs....great distractions. More to come. I'm hopeful that this along with the private trainer will help us to turn the corner. I'm forever the optimist.
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Definitely agree with the whole 'focus' thing. I don't care if my dogs stare at me -- but they often do it on their own to help themselves. Like yesterday when during Boca's sit stay I put a plate of food down next to her and one right in front of her, under her nose (on the floor). She just stared at me to keep from looking at the food =) When I'm walking them (whether in heel or not) I want them to relax and enjoy their surroundings...look where they are going rather than staring at me. When in a down stay, I want them to relax and look where they want...I only care if they leave their position not where they look. It's up to them to learn to keep themselves in place even if something really enticing is catching their eye.
I also totally agree with NOT letting the dog practice bad things. The story of the dog who stole the kids papers cracked me up. How does someone LET their dog do that for soooo long? You'd think the kids would have done better at hiding their papers from the dog too--well unless they were relieved to have them stolen ;-) LOL
LOL! Yes, Adina, I could just see me as a kid...putting gravy on my school papers so my dog would run off with them!
Jane, what a great class! This sounds wonderful, and I would love it (if you have time) to hear more from you about this class! Thank you for sharing your experiences!
The most difficult challenge is going to be to learn to react appropriately when a dog is acting inappropriately because they are "not thinking"....when a chemical reaction has "taken them over". That's my Murph (and there are two other dogs with the exact same issue in the class). I can't wait to learn more about this.
I'd like to hear more about this when the time comes. McGee gets like this sometimes, like his brain just turns off. We start class in a couple of weeks, hope they cover this too. I hope my instructor is half as thorough as yours sounds!
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