Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
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Jane, where did you get the martigale collar?
They are hard to find. Go to www.dogcollarsboutique.com and search for a Martingale Dog Training Collar. Make sure it has the chain. Rooney came home with his first one and I just ordered a larger one for Stuart. Dogs that can't walk on a leash have just never had proper training and as a puppy can be taught in 1 session.
Walking without pulling is a tough lesson. It most definitely takes more than two weeks. You can expect to work constantly on it, get it pretty good, then in a few weeks or months have trouble again. First of all do not expect to walk anywhere for awhile. When Trixi gets ahead of you turn 180 degrees( half around that is going back where you came from). Do not talk, just let her hit the end of the leash and then she will turn herself around just as she gets in the exact heel position, treat and say good girl. Repeat, repeat repeat... Do not walk in straight lines turn very frequently - left if she is getting ahead and bump her with your knee gently, no talk if she backs up into the heel position - good girl. Turn right when she begins to lag from being bumped and let her hit the end of the leash, when she is in the exact heel position -good girl. Do not always treat - treat frequently but keep her guessing - treating should begin always and drop to a high random level then medium random etc. This helps maintain attention. It is also perfectly okay to use only praise and no treats. Treating at the exact right time is trickier than praise at the exact right time.
Remember to keep it short and interesting for Trixi, not necessarily for you. She is young and eager to see the world. intersperse heeling with "sniffers" 5 minutes heel and 2 minutes "sniffers" Gradually increase the heel time. Sniffers means Trixi gets to wander as she pleases with you keeping up so there is never any tension on the leash.
Interesting things to do: make circles, figure eights, spirals (both directions) and other designs in the street and around obstacles. Walk close to a wall on your left so Trixie is in between the wall and you. Find a playground and walk randomly around the equipment -in and out and under and over. Walk on different surfaces and in different places.
Trixi does not have a clue what you want, but she does want to figure it out. Help her by praising her with short but a distinct phrase "good" "good girl" "excellent" reserved only for training. Timing is crucial. Use the word exactly as the behavior occurs. Try not to use this word randomly as a love word. I use "excellent" because I am not apt to say it when I am just loving them up and it has a distinct sound.
Patience, practice, consistency, and timing, and find a good beginner training class.
You almost have to disconnect 'leash' and 'heel' training with going on a walk down a sidewalk in a straight line. Heel training is about training a position relative to you. So to get a good and reliable heel (assuming you're training 'heel' the command to mean a specific position relative to you) you can't really plan on walking 5 blocks. You want to plan to work on 'heel' however many steps that means.
On the other hand if you really just want to be able to go so many blocks on the sidewalk and have a somewhat normal walk, then you might do better with one of the management tools like a gentle leader, no-pull harness, or prong collar and just go and complete your walk and then separately work on 'heel'.
Rosey uses a Gentle Leader Head Collar, nothing else worked... but yes your doodette is still a bit young....takes tons of practice. Good Luck!
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