Workingdoglover
Posted : 3/16/2009 8:37:51 PM
I think it depends on the dog. With Rafe I had trained the heel first, without doing much on attention work (wish I would've done the method Leisje is doing, but this works, too). So he already knew the position, I just had to get him to look up at me constantly. I used a toy for that, because we were already doing lots of drive work and he gets amped up pretty quickly and easily. I used a small tug, and play with him for a bit, then go into a heel with the toy up at my left shoulder. Worked like a charm for him, although at first it got a little sloppy because of his excitement. If you don't have a dog that's very toy driven, though, that probably wouldn't be the best way for you to go.
Food works SO well with Soda. Same kind of principle as above, just with food. I tend to like to drop treats so they have to be watching me to catch them. We're still working on her heel (I'm not really using any leash or collar with her when heel training, so it's a little different than what I did with Rafe), so I'm doing both at the same time. Again, she's really food driven, so if your dog isn't then it might not work out that well.
So I guess I'm just saying you have to do what you dog responds to best. There are so many ways of doing it. Some people spit hotdogs from their mouth to the dogs. Some people give a correction every time the dog is NOT looking at them (not the best in my opinion). Some just go without a motivator (like holding the toy or treat at the shoulder), and just click/treat or praise every time the dog looks up at them. Just kinda whatever works for you.
Also, like Leisje said, kinda depends on what kind of heel you're looking for. An OB heel and a schutzhund heel tend to be a little different.