ron2
Posted : 4/9/2007 6:31:38 AM
Even though books and sources say that a dog can catch onto a clicker in a few sessions, I spent about a week, once a day, just clicking and treating, to get used to the idea that click means reward. (I can sometimes have the patience of Job.)
The first few actual sessions involved re-establishing previous obedience with the clicker added as the marker of a completed task.
Finally, ready for free-shaping, I used a butter tub. Not much at first. Then, I re-read, and realized that, initially, you needed the object between you and the dog. I would say, in approximately 3 clicks at the most, he understood. The touch that became a heel was, IMO, half lure, half shaping. But, with the tub, by click 3, he was getting creative. He understood that something he could do could earn a reward. And this gives him the power to decide to move or offer behavior for the reward. And that, I think, strengthens the commanded or cued obedience.
So, after the patience of charging the clicker, I would say the actual light bulb was a little longer than the blink of an eye, approaching 2 heartbeats.