Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Hi Everyone,
We have come a long way with our Cooper and he is doing great. He knows all his basic commands (sit, down, stay, wait, leave it, drop it, come) but he does not always want to listen to me and I'm just wondering what to do in certain situations. He is 8 months old so I know this is a tough age but I just want to make sure I don't reinforce the not listening.
1) when he's outside and I want him to come in, I will stand at the back door and tell him to come. If he wants to stay outside he refuses to come. If the kids have him on a leash outside to take him potty, he will sometimes just lay down on the grass and refuse to budge. I have resorted to yelling "come turkey" or "come cheese" so he knows it's a high reward treat if he comes but that isn't even always working right now. The only thing that seems to consistently work is to get the bag of cheese out and show it to him but that seems sort of ridiculous at this point and I don't want to reinforce his not listening. What should i do in these situations?
2) he is allowed on our couch but lately he has taken to digging in between the cushions. We tell him no and off but that usually does not work and we have to take him by the collar and lead him off. I will usually put him in the crate so he can simmer down for a few minutes. Any suggestions on this issue?
3) before we leave the house for a walk, he has to sit and wait at each door. he will always do this for a treat if he knows the treat in his my hand but will not always do it on just the verbal command or the hand motion for sit. Is it fine for me to still have the treat in my hand at this age?
4) he never jumps on us (well very very rarely) which took a lot of training especially with my 6 year old son so we are thrilled with this. However, he gets super excited when new people come to the house and he barks like crazy if I have him on a leash to prevent the jumping. The other day my daughter had a friend over and the only that worked was putting him in the easy walk harness instead of regular leash and letting him be around her. It took all of two minutes to work this out but that was because the girl was skiddish and wanted nothing to do with him. If people engage him in any way, he takes a long time to settle. He jumps, when the person tells him to sit he will sometimes but as soon as the person goes to pet him as a reward, he goes crazy again. Any tips?
Thank you all so much for any feedback! Oh and I am posting in the puppy madness group because he is only 8 months but should I post in training group instead? I wasn't sure.
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congrats on your puppy!! I am not an expert, so hopefully others will weigh in here, but what I have learned from this group is what I'll share.
I learned that to not use the COME command unless you know they know it. As it does set you up for the 'not listening' as you are experiencing. The sit, stay, lay are easy commands for dogs I was told. And so I had to work harder for the COME command. practice in a calm environment, and then work up to the distracted environment. I have a real nosy dog, and it took almost a year before I felt he knew it. But I practiced almost EVERY day for months.
another thing I did that was helpful to me, was to sit with my pup on the front porch, and let him look around, and when he would look at me, I would quickly give him a treat. (small small small treat) of course they get excited and think the hands have treats, but put him back into a sit command and just watch the world go by, but each time he looks without being told to look, he gets a treat. As we progressed in this, I would walk around the house, and if the dog would follow or try to come find me, he would get rewarded. This helps reinforce the dog looking for you or to you for directions. I then added saying his name. and moving away from him or out of sight, and rewarded when he comes to me.
when we were outside and I was ready to come in, it was 'let's go' and he should be following me, or it was hooked up to the leash with command "come" and he had to follow as he was on leash.
What to do until you have the come command? hook the dog up to the leash and bring him in. My dog gets stubborn sometimes, but be strong because as like kids, if they win one battle, more is to come! lol
2: is he sniffing out a crumb or treat between the cushions? we have blankets on our couch where the dog lays. I am not sure on this one, other than he wants something under the cushion.
3; keep practicing. work your way to verbal praise. try every other time with treat, that way the dog does not know when he is going to get a treat or not. and no outside until he sits!
4: we are at 2 years and still working on the no jumping on people. We find it better when I leash him, stand on leash when greeting people so they can't be jumped on. And then I keep him on leash until he calms down, sometimes 30 minutes. these pups love people. I read that they want to access people's faces as they were licked by their mothers as a sign of love, so I try to bend over and say hello, holding down the dog so he can get access to my face. some of our guests do the same, some are not willing. we are still a work in progress!!
keep up the training....these are very smart dogs.
Thank you so much for this reply! I love the idea of treating when the dog looks to you or follows you.
No crumbs in the couch - we, too, have blankets on the couch. I think he digs when he has pent up puppy energy or when he's overtired. We have noticed he is getting tired earlier in the evenings so into the crate he goes and he's good for the night. It's earlier in the day that is difficult because he is relentless with the digging.
Yes, Cooper wants so bad to get to peoples' faces. When he's good and greets by sitting, as soon as people give him attention he looks up at them and I know what's coming - he tries to jump up to give a good lick.
Thanks again for the reply!
Thank you for the reply! Great advice and I will put into practice tomorrow! I think you are right and I need to be strong in my expectations of him. At 9 months old now, I know he is capable of waiting etc...
I need a place to remove him from the fun. Do you think a crate in my bedroom would work? He is normally not allowed in my bedroom but I have a second crate I can put in there for this purpose. He is crated when we are not home and when he goes to bed so I know he likes and does well in a crate. I'm just not sure how he will do crated when he knows there is activity going on in another room... And also not sure how he will handle being crated in a different place than usual. But it would be great to have this as an option so I think I'm going to give it a try.
Thank you, great advice! So what is the emergency recall technique? Also, I like practicing the regular recall during playtime. Going to start that! Thanks again!
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