calliecritturs
Posted : 12/18/2012 4:49:50 PM
The others are way more qualified than I am but I'm going to insert just a couple of things *I* had to learn as "Wow -- DUH!" kind of moments to get a grasp on something.
A. You can't let her screw up. That means -- you can't just treat it as "what do I do to get her in after she's been loose" -- you back around to "She must NOT be allowed to get out". Containment -- crating, kennelling, whatever.
Even in the house -- if you can't get a dog to come TO you, you're screwed. So ... you don't let them get AWAY from you. Let them drag a leash or even a ribbon tied to the collar that is long enough for you to walk up and stand on it without having to reach out to the dog.
When you have a problem like "what do I do when ...." you have to back up far enough in your own mind/behavior so that the scenario just plain doesn't have an opportunity to happen. THEN you can make changes in a positive manner.
B. Pyrs are almost more "livestock guardians" than just "herders" -- that means they make decisions.
What Jewillee says about "nothing in life is free" is huge. AGAIN - you may say "in the house she's sweet and ok". BUT if she was truly as 'trained' as you think she'd be able to make better decisions when she's away from you because of the trust and bond. So you can't let them have more freedom than they can reliably respond correctly to.
So you can't let her be "loose" if she doesn't come to you 100% of the time (particularly since this is a point of contention).
You can't "teach" a dog if the dog is far enough away from you that they can stand there and ignore you. You've lost control. And bottom line -- you can't even **THINK** about control outside until you have 100% success with her inside in a zillion different scenarios.
Dogs are VERY situational. She may come to you 99 times out of 100 in the living room with a hand with a treat. But if you move to the bedroom or the kitchen ??? She may look at you like "what does THAT mean?" because to her it only had veracity in the living room.
so -- even more so -- when she's "outside" the rules are ALLLLLLLL different for her. She's in charge and she thinks you don't know squat about THAT part of her life so she doesn't need to listen to you!
Honestly you have to think like the dog (cos they don't think like us)