A Seed Saver's Garden

heirloomgal

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Attended my first agility class tonight (for dogs, not humans!) Wow, 2 hours long and it was a GREAT class! I learned so much. Watching how the different dogs react to each scary obstacle and the proper way to respond. The whole thing really is reinforcement + deterrence. Of course, communicating in those 2 gears with a dog is a science; its a marvel to see how well these people understand the minds of dogs.

Oh how I wish I had known some of this 8 years ago! But better late than never. One super frightened dog had to walk the long raised platform only a foot wide and 3 feet high, for maybe 20 feet. It was a good sized dog too. The owner managed to get her to the end of the ramp and off - and immediately began praising her for a job well done. And thereby convinced the dog that indeed this is a terrible thing to be on and getting off of it is the best thing you can do!

I wouldn't have caught that, but the trainer did. It reminded me of a time walking with my dog and the section of trail we were on was alongside a railway track. A very loud train was approaching and let its shrieking whistle go, a truly unpleasant experience for me, and so I started to jog a bit with the dog to build some distance between us and that train. 5 seconds into my sprint I realized in horror what I was doing, conditioning my dog to think trains are something to be afraid of! I stopped immediately, but my heart swelled with fear at what damage lay beneath that mistake. Sure enough the next time we were there a train came whistling up and he was, for the first time ever, nervous of the train. I fixed that over the course of the next few walks, but it was a sobering lesson for me in how easy it is to influence a dog the wrong way!
 

ducks4you

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It is SOOOOO much easier to train a puppy when you have a trained dog already in the house.
This time around I don't, and I run into weird issues. Tegan (8mo) hasn't had any accidents in almost a full month, but she cues with her paws now to go outside but doesn't do anything. Today alone, 6 trips, pottied twice.
I don't want to say no, but I am doing important phone business today, so I put her in her crate. This is the 2nd time in 4 weeks she's been put in the crate, since she is now my sleeping buddy.
I am awaiting an important call back in 55 minutes, so I guess I'll try to change to horse feeding clothes and take her out. I have a cotton web horse lunge with a handle which is affixed to a short wooden post on the front of the barn, and I take her out on a leash and hook her to This. She gets some running and fresh air, and I don't have to drag her around, which works bc she often spins around me and I don't want to get tripped. :barnie
 

heirloomgal

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It is SOOOOO much easier to train a puppy when you have a trained dog already in the house.
This time around I don't, and I run into weird issues. Tegan (8mo) hasn't had any accidents in almost a full month, but she cues with her paws now to go outside but doesn't do anything. Today alone, 6 trips, pottied twice.
I don't want to say no, but I am doing important phone business today, so I put her in her crate. This is the 2nd time in 4 weeks she's been put in the crate, since she is now my sleeping buddy.
I am awaiting an important call back in 55 minutes, so I guess I'll try to change to horse feeding clothes and take her out. I have a cotton web horse lunge with a handle which is affixed to a short wooden post on the front of the barn, and I take her out on a leash and hook her to This. She gets some running and fresh air, and I don't have to drag her around, which works bc she often spins around me and I don't want to get tripped. :barnie
SO true ducks. Dogs really do learn so well from another dog showing them the ropes!
 

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