houndlove
Posted : 10/12/2006 9:37:09 AM
[link
http://beta.clickertraining.com/node/167]Here's a link[/link] to Karen Pryor's article on this exercise (I hope that link works, but if it doesn't if you google Karen Pryor and "box" I'm sure it will come up). She explains the process and also talks about some ways to make the box game turn into something useful for your dog to do aside from just fiddle around with a box.
It's mainly just a game, a mental exercise and a way to do something stimulating with your dog. I did it for all those reasons and also because I wanted to do a little experiment to see what the difference would be between my two dogs (on the floor above my office, as we speak, rats are running around in mazes, so maybe some of that spirit has rubbed off on me). Karen Pryor even says in her explanation of the exercise that it is something good to do with cross-over dogs, with older dogs and with dogs who are suspicious. Conrad is all of those things (well, less suspicious and more just prone to anxiety in general), so I thought I'd see how he'd do.
Given a situation in which its clear I don't expect anything from him and he can do what he wants, he explores plenty. But in the situation with the box, it was obvious that I was expecting him to do something, and in that case he didn't know what on earth to do and he wouldn't try anything other than what he already knows (sit or lie down) in order to see if that would work. Marlowe has a pretty good "stay" (or rather, "sit maintain" because I don't use a stay command--"sit" means "sit until I give you a release word") and would have sat there all day and stared at me rather than playing with the box if that is what he'd been asked to do. As it was, he knew he was supposed to do something, but he didn't know what, and the "usual suspects" didn't pan out, so he began to experiment.
This illustrates really well how a dog may appear to be very obedient but in fact just be sort of lost and frozen. Conrad sure
looked obedient as all get-out, sitting there motionless even when I didn't ask him to do that. Once upon a time, that's all I wanted from a dog, and that's what I got. But now that I've seen what a dog
can do, just sitting there and not moving when faced with a novel situation just looks sad to me. The box will be making regular appearances in the house until Conrad begins to understand that being creative and experimenting is also rewarded. I'm really looking forward to working with him. [

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I think as my first goal with him, I want him to learn to bring me his Kongs to be refilled, because it gets irritating hunting them down around the house every evening! Why should I do all the work? [

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