pjcampbell
Posted : 3/10/2008 6:09:47 PM
I will check out "Really Reliable Recall" just out of curiosity but I would say that our pup is already trained.
I prefer the concept of not giving treats as the result of a command followed. Instead, when you are ALL done with everything and the dog has done well, give the dog something even better than treat (like real food). I guess the idea is to avoid the dog having any association with doing right means food. And maybe this lessens the chance that if someone else has a treat they will listen to that person and/or ignore you. For example at the dog park there's always someone with treats in their pocket or holding them in their hand and I probably don't want our pup following this person around, begging, or as nice of a gesture as it is, taking treats from a stranger. I can call her over and she listens and that is a great thing. I guess another example is we go out on a walk without a leash and I don't need to think about having anything with me other than my voice and she listens very well.
The "magic touch" is throwing a sock at a dog. Choking is choking. These 2 things are not on the same level. If you've ever had a sock thrown at you I doubt you could say it hurts. Again the object is to make contact, not to pelt at the dog, not to harm the dog. Dogs are tougher than people. When they play they chew each others necks for fun. Do I think throwing things is OK? I think that you need to be a disciplinarian just like you would to a child. If throwing a sock a handful of times solves major problems then yes. I'm open to other possibilities but this is what came my way and it worked. Also a choke collar, training collar, "release collar", prong collar, are typically tools that get used throughout the dog's life. At least for several months while we used them (they were "required" as part of the obedience class we took) and never really helped much. Of course it's not that difficult to get an animal to go when you go and stop when you stop when you've got them by the neck. The sock throwing could only be a handful of times. After that the sock evolved into voice control (at least for me) and she responds very very well to that. She responds very well even to huge distractions. Examples are walking directly next to a dog who is behind an electric fence (a concept I'm sure which my dog doesn't understand since she's never been on one) and she will stay by my side. That is a pretty big distraction I would say.
Have you read his books? There is a newer book "Heart of the matter" which I have not yet read. He brings many points to the table, not just throwing things. I will admit some of them are a little weird (matchstick up the butt) but a lot of them maybe you go HMMMMM... and yes that sounds a lot nicer for the dog and makes much more sense. For us it prompted us to get rid of the crate and change her diet considerably. A negative point, I thought it was very odd that his huge section on DIET didn't include any comment on the dog's activity level. I think exercise is a huge aspect in a dog's life and of course more activity = more calories burned = more food intake required. I am by no means a guru or an expert. I've had a dog for literally 6 months and she never "needs" to be on the leash. It is really a joy for all of us and I often question how she got this way (she didn't come this way from the shelter!). The only thing I can think of is that it was the "magic touch" because after choke collars did nothing for me . Otherwise it could simply be the confidence gained thinking "the dog is going to listen to me."
For what it's worth, our dog does not follow me like this: I would be curious as to what their methods are.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJ8648svGFc
I think the bottom line is that we want to be happy and our dog's to be happy and for us a huge part of this is being off leash. I don't think it's a requirement but it's a wonderful quality of life improvement for both.