The ‘no’ command is a widely used command throughout dog training and is used to tell your dog not to do something or to stop them in their tracks to avoid dangerous situations or general bad behavior.
I think of the no command as more of a training technique rather than a command and to perfect the technique you will need to be consistent for most of your time with your pet dog. The no command isn’t like other commands and is taught over several years rather than a ‘learn it and forget it’ dog training technique.
You can start to teach your dog the no command as soon as you see your cute little puppy doing something wrong for the first time, to most people the command will come naturally when they see their dog causing terror in the house and it will not be too hard for them to remember how to execute the technique.
The no command should come part and parcel with punishing your dog, the idea behind the no command is to teach your dog that ‘no’ means bad behavior and punishment, after teaching this command the end result will be that your dog should stop whatever they are doing when you say ‘no’.
So to make this command work you will need to enforce and recite ‘no’ in a very assertive way whenever you are punishing your dog or see your dog behaving badly that will result in punishment. By doing this your dog will associate ‘no!’ with being punished and making you the owner, unhappy.
If you do this consistently through your dogs earlier years, especially when your dog is a puppy and very impressionable you will gain respect from your dog and just saying ‘no’ alone will be enough to stop your dog in its tracks and save you punishing your dog.
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Noted veterinarian and dog trainer Dr. Ian Dunbar offers a few of the “million different ways” to train a dog, outlining three simple strategies. EG is the celebration of the American entertainment industry. Since 1984, Richard Saul Wurman has created extraordinary gatherings about learning and understanding. EG is a rich extension of these ideas – a conference that explores the attitude of understanding in music, film, television, radio, technology, advertising, gaming, interactivity and …
Help answer the question about Dog Trainning
Does anybody live in Bakersfield ,CA? And need puppy/ dog trainning?Well if u come 2 class on tuesday's at 6:30pm at wilderness park, u can train yr dog. It doesnt matter how old u r. u just need 2 beable 2 train a dog. I know we dont need more dogs, but the more the better.and i just want 2 surprise the trainer. I just really want 2 help people. So thankyou in advanced.
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thanx this will speed up my dog when she poos
Hey,
for dogs:
sit down/down – sitz! down! halt!,
lay (down)- Platz! Mach Platz!
stay – bleib! steh!
come – komm!
let's go – auf!
*when you want your dog to be by your side (when he has no line) – Fuß!
* to get/catch something – Apport!
* when the dog has something in mouth and you want it to make it away/to let this thing free – aus!
here – hier!
Horse commands:
dismount – Absteigen
mount – Aufsteigen
Crate training is by far the best way to house train your dog. Google it.
Eric,
From the bottom of my heart thank you for posting this Vid! I never had a dog and got an american bulldog. After scanning all of Vids yourS stuck in my head. My pup only “got busy” one time in the house as a pup. And because his bladder could not hold to the door from the kennel. Your get busy command is the best thing i have learned on this dog voyage!! THANK YOU!!!!
Make sure you always have very delicious treats and treat him immediately when he barks. Little cubes of cheese, bits of hot dog, something he'll really work for. I bet he'll be as quick and consistent as you are in under a week, maybe by the end of the first day, if you ask several times for short periods.
what you can do is leave the treat on the floor and when you're ready to release him, coax him to eat the treat, like tap the floor, or push the treat closer to him and when he picks up the treat give the "ok" Thats how I tought my dog.
DAMN LOVE UR VIDS
Good choice of words haha. Thank you for the vid. Do you happen to have any on getting your puppy to actually go outside and walk with you?
You should check – http://www.schoolingdogs.com/ – It has a no. of books which helps in dog training, agressive dog training, training dogs not to bark and more.
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for one, realizing she's yet a young puppy and has a lot to learn is something you need to realize. do you have her on a schedule for going potty outside? if not, then you need to make one for when your at home. such as about a ten minutes to twenty minutes after she eats, walk around outside with her and praise her when she does the deed.
most animals respond to tone of voice using a low yet firm tone and saying "un unh!" will usually get their attention if their doing something wrong.
when your crate training her, using the treat is a good idea; it gives her the sense this is a good place to be and makes you happy she goes in there. it's possible that your using the wrong tone when trying to get her without the treat, try using a reassuring tone and giving her lots of love and pets. also you could try leaving her favorite chew toy inside the crate instead of a treat.
but for the most part when training any dog or puppy, be constaint with your training, but also realize that the puppy will have a short attention span, so keep the daily training to about a half hour at a time, as she gets older you extend the amount of time you train with her. good luck and hope i helped!!
loved this video too; i live in a very cold part of Canada and just got a puppy a month ago. I take him out regularily but sometimes when it is too cold it is hard to get him to concentrate. I will try taking the leash today and using a command word. Thank you for this video. I think if animal shelters used more behavioralists to offer free animal behaviour advice there would be less animals euthanised; animal shelters should try to help the frustrated pet owners as part of the process.
good advice. i lost my puppys collar and have been letting him go out without a leash and ive had nothing but problems. makes sense
Best way is to train him to go to a certain spot when you give a command. I trained my mother's Springer Spaniel to "Bed" which is her dog bed, my own dogs are trained to "Go lie down" which means they head for their crates. Once trained to do this, with repetition combined with NEVER feeding a begging dog, they stop doing it.
To train the dogs I simply gave the command, walked over to the spot and dropped a treat.. after a couple dozen times they headed there before I was even walking.
your question is a good one. However, some people are ignorant of your possible situation as to why you might want a dog to attack. Now, the question is, do you want a Property protection dog, and executive protection dog, or a sentry dog. Well, actually, you can rule out the sentry dog seeing as how you said is a pushover and the mere fact you are asking the question. Not an insult, you just need A LOT more experience with attack dogs before you move to Sentry dogs. First thing I will tell you is this, you need to see the character of the dog before you start any bite work. Simply put, if the dog doesn't have the character or the prey drive for the work, she won't bite. That is the truth regardless of what any "trainer" or so called "trainer" will tell you. You can do this simple prey drive test yourself by holding a rag in front of her and seeing if she tries to catch it and bite it. If she does, you move on to the next step which is developing the bite. Basically, you want the dog to bite with a full mouth grip. This can take time but you can do it yourself. Check online for tips on this. Next comes the actual helper work. Someone else, NOT YOU OR YOUR FAMILY has to be willing to get bitten by the dog using a sleeve or bite suit. Your best bet is to hire a helper or a professional dog trainer that does work with protection work. Depending where you live, this might be hard to find. The work with the helper takes time and will require a good amount of money, usually 500-2000 depending on how far you want the training to go. Sometimes more depending on what genetics the dog has. BEFORE you do all this, you will want your dog to have obedience training. The reason for this is because during the bite training, there are portions where the dog will be off leash and you need to have control of the dog while off leash. Again, look online for specifics or hire a trainer. Attacking on command takes time… it will take time and will not happen overnight. YOu don't want to push the dog too much too far because you might ruin the dog.
Her temperment will be the same towards you and your immediate family or whoever is in the "family circle" everyone else, like normal will be looked at with a wary eye. Don't listen to people who think bite work will make the animal crazy or savage. This is bullshit. The truth is, a trained dog is more reliable and safe than an untrained dog. Especially a bite trained dog because they know and understand when and how to bite. VERY RARELY do you hear of a truely trained dog (not just backyard trained but fully trained dog) to attack anyone without cause.
Just wanted to add one thing that most people do not know or understand or want to accept. 80-85% of dogs, when placed in a position where someone is walking towards them in a threatning manner WILL run away. Its innate to them. Only about 20-25% of dogs will go into fight drive. Thats it. So everyone that say, "oh, my dog will protect me if something happens" are only wishing that would happen. Another reason for protection training is to raise the confidence level in the dog and make them want to fight and stop the intruders. This is statistically proven by not only police departments but REAL trainers and decoys who work with dogs everyday/every year all over the world.
We got our puppy 12 days ago and this is working GREAT! Thank you!
Most people who do it don't know what they're doing, so for them it's a total mess.
For others who know what they're doing, it's really awesome. The dogs love it and it's good for both the dog and the trainer.
I dunno, it's all about the dog and who's training it.
wonderful advive!
Only problem i have is that everytime i put the leash on my pup gets too excited and begins to pee before we even get outside… no idea how to deal with that all i do is just not even take him out anymore when he does that