Chuffy
I'll spell it out for you. There was food a short distance from her. My hand was on her chest. She PUSHED. Hard enough to push an adult to the ground if they weren't expecting it. Might that indicate I did something right while attempting the exercise in the week leading up to the incident?
Not necessarily. It might, but I couldn't say for sure. I'm still not getting a clear picture of what happened. Sorry, you didn't really spell it out. How big is the dog? Were you sitting or standing (I assume you were sitting)? Why was your hand on her chest, because you saw that she was interested in the food item, or was it just resting there (I assume you put it there to prevent her from going after the food)? I don't know if your hand was in the same position as when you'd done the exercise, I don't know why you were doing the exercise (what behavioral problems you were working on), I don't know if you were in the same general position relative to her as when you did the exercise, etc. If all of these things were exactly the same, then I'd give more credence to the idea that the exercise may have juiced this behavior beyond what she would've ordinarily done in the same situation prior to pushing. But even if that were so, I'm not sure I'd come to that conclusion. I might, I just don't know if I would or not.
Chuffy
The problem was, I wasn't expecting her to do that (maybe I am just stupid) and she went straight past my hand. Her momentum knocked my 12month old son over and he banged his head. She didn't even GET the food as it happened, but that wasn't such a huge deal because for all I know she was after that feeling of SUCCESS! as much as a tidbit. The pushing in and of itself (can I get to that? can I? can I? can I?!!!!) was a great game. I'm tempted to believe that the food (and perhaps the fact we were outside) was the signal to her we were playing that game again, as much as the sausage was simply tasty-smelling.
In my experience this is bit of a stretch. But who's to say? You were there and you know your dog. I, meanwhile, have more experience with the exercise.
Chuffy
That's what made me drop the exercise more than anything else. If you
think that means I'm "not really interested", then fine. Admitted I am
infinitely more interested in keeping my son and his head in one piece
than I am in proving a point about dog training. If that negates my
interest in "pushing" in your eyes, so be it.
I don't know. I don't enough about your dog's behavioral tendencies to be able to say if this behavior was a direct result of you having done the exercise, or if you did it "properly" or not. I tend to see a single event as insufficient data. Two similar events can be coincidence, three may be the start of a pattern. It's only when you get four events of the same type, taking place in very similar conditions, with similar dogs, etc., that I'm comfortable drawing conclusions. However, I don't blame you for blaming the pushing exercise. If I were in your shoes, and my child had been injured due to a sudden new behavior that my dog had never exhibited before I'd definitely err on the side of caution, so to speak.
I'm not sure why you seem so defensive, though. I thought you had said that you weren't interested in the exercise. I wasn't making any judgments about you or your level of interest, etc. I was simply (at least in my mind) re-stating what you had already said.
But again, now that I know what happened, and that you (perhaps rightly, I don't know) attribute your child's injury to the pushing exercise, I still don't know anything about your dog's previous background, her behavioral tendencies, etc. And from what I've observed (and I have done this a few times), dogs won't push against you in the same way they do during the exercise unless you've got food in your hands and they know you're doing the exercise. In fact, in my experience they're very specific and very exact about this.
Meanwhile, here are the steps to doing the exercise properly:
1. Start by just getting your dog used to being fed by hand and to the fact that YOU have lots of good food. Take small amounts of food out of the pouch and offer it to your dog, letting her take the food from you without providing any resistance. You might need to crouch down for a small dog. For an especially timid dog, you might even need to start out by tossing food at her from a distance, encouraging her to come closer by tosses that land nearer and nearer to you.
2. As you’re feeding your dog, mix in some praise in a relaxing tone of voice.
3. Back away a step or two and use the food to encourage your dog to come to you. Feed the dog a little bit more. Note: NEVER move TOWARD your dog. Always move AWAY. This is part of becoming more prey-like in your dog’s eyes.
4. Start calling your dog’s name as you offer the food to her. Call her name in an eager, excited tone.
At this point, the exercise will be something like this:
Back away a couple steps.
“Sparky!” (eager, excited, good dog tone)
Feed the dog, offering praise in a relaxed tone.
Once your dog is reliably taking steps toward you for food, in a relatively uninhibited manner, it’s time to incorporate your left hand.
5. Before you do anything, practice the following position: Put food in your right hand. Hold both hands comfortably in front of you (elbows bent), with your right hand above your left hand by a couple of inches (max). Your right hand should be cupped around the food, while your left hand should be held open, palm-up, and a few inches in front of your right hand. Your right hand, though closed, should also be palm up. Move your hands around as a unit - just getting used to their being in close proximity to each other. One of the biggest mistakes that people make with pushing is having their hands too far apart to push effectively.
6. Now call your dog’s name and let her come across your left hand with their muzzle to get the food from your right hand. Don’t do anything with your left hand yet - the goal is just to get her accustomed to having your left hand there.
It’s important for you to register what’s going on with your dog. Is she getting tense? Take a break from the feeding, and take some steps to relax her. Give her some good, long massaging strokes, or take a break to play some tug of war. The more relaxed she is, the more focused she'll be on this exercise.
Also, take note of how your dog is approaching you. You want your dog to come directly towards you in order to get the food. If your dog is moving to one side or another to approach at an angle, that’s a sign that she's getting stressed, and you want to take steps to relax her.
7. Slowly, slowly, slowly introduce some action with your left hand. You should think of your left hand as trying to SOFTEN and relax anything that it comes in contact with. While your right hand holds onto the food (i.e. the dog is trying to GET the food, but you have your thumb across the food keeping the dog from getting it), your left hand will slowly massage her muzzle and neck. Keep it very gentle at first, just to get her used to the sensation, and then gradually increase the depth of the massage. At all times your left hand should massage the dog slowly and deliberately. Just do a little bit of massage at a time, then let your dog get the food from your right hand. Again, if your dog backs away then you stimulated her too much before letting her get the food - next time let her have the food SOONER (or massage her less).
IMPORTANT: Your dog will only tolerate the massaging as long as she's interested in getting the food. Once your dog gets the food, there is no longer any incentive for her to put up with the contact from you. This whole exercise is about building up the duration of time that your dog can handle the direct contact from you as she tries to get the food. Since that incentive goes away once she's gotten the food, you should stop massaging/pushing as soon as your right hand has given the food.
8. As your dog gets used to the massaging action of your left hand, don’t forget the other aspects…back away a few steps, call your dog’s name, tempt the dog with the food in the right hand while you massage with the left hand, give the dog the food and praise.
9. As your left hand makes contact with your dog, gradually position it further down to the base of the neck where it meets the chest. This is ultimately where you want to be. Once you’re there, keep up with the slow massaging, so that your dog gets used to having your hand there. You might also notice at this point that your dog will provide some counter pressure, pushing against you as you massage her chest. This is exactly what you want!
10. Transition your left hand from massaging into an ever-so-slight push against your dog’s chest (right at/below where the neck meets the chest). It is now MORE IMPORTANT THAN EVER that you be gradual - just give a slow, deliberate push so that your dog pushes back, then release the push and let her have the food. As you push, you should constantly be feeling the situation and matching the level of push that your dog is giving you. Once she gets comfortable with the push, you can start praising as well (something like “good push…push, push, push…” etc.).
11. Work on moving slowly backwards as you push with your left hand. This can be harder to do than it sounds, because our tendency is to move FORWARD as we push. So pay attention to maintaining the push with your left hand while you move backwards with your feet. Take time to make sure that you got it right! It’s important to keep the exercise moving backwards (i.e. the dog is moving towards you while you move backwards) because it is both encouraging the dog to move towards you in a state of drive and it also keeps the energy flowing.
12. Gradually (are you getting the key word yet?) increase the amount that you push. As your push increases, so should your dog’s level of pushing back. Ultimately, you want your dog to REALLY be driving at you for the food. Your dog will eventually push so hard that the front paws might come up off the ground. That’s good too! If your dog keeps pushing against your left hand with their front legs off the ground as you move backwards - using their back legs to drive right towards you, then you have gotten to where you want to be.
13. As a subtle nuance, you can start saying “Ready…” before you call your dog’s name. So you’d say “Ready…Sparky!” as the pushing game begins. Think of “ready” as if you’re saying “may I have your attention!” - it’s the cue that the pushing is about to happen. Do not focus on making your dog wait - say ready, then call your dog’s name to “release” her into the pushing. Eventually you can incorporate the “ready” into your work with the “stay” (as a way of building her anticipation before the release) - but don’t worry about that now. “Ready” also becomes a powerful cue for your dog - in the early stages of my training Nola, for instance, I could just say “Ready…” as she was about to chase a squirrel, and she would come running towards me for a push instead.
Sorry for the long post, and I did my best to pare down Neil Sattin's verbiage. But I think it's important to have this as a reference for not only your benefit, but others who may have read this only once before in passing, or not at all.
I hope this helps,
LCK