espencer
Posted : 6/25/2008 5:57:48 PM
Liesje
I may try a head halter. I've never used one before, but there was a dog starting in my class wearing some sort of head halter. The owner was able to loosen it so when the dog was running the course it looked like a collar with an extra bit hanging off.
He has a flat collar, an Easy Walk and a prong, this would be his fourth collar, i imagine that you use each for every different situation, i dont think the collar is communicating what you want him to learn
Liesje
when we let him off with Justin and he started
bullying, we were both saying "HEY Coke!!" and sort of body blocking
into the dogs and Coke paid zero attention, just kept jumping on
Justin.
That was a good approach if it was at the beginning, by the time you decided to do it it was too late, he was already too focused and excited that it was not working anymore, you were basically using a "level 5 redirection" (to name it in some way) for a "level 8 excitement" (to name it in some way), you need a "level 8 or 9 type of redirection" to be successful, that means to do something that will distract him enough away from the other dog to keep pay attention to him, maybe a touch on the hip with a verbal correction and a body block, if the dog is not looking at you then it wont work, if you do it with a "i hope this works attitude but i dont know" then it wont work either, you really need to mean what you are doing, your body language is reflected in your attitude
Liesje
he was yelled at previously so now that means nothing to him.
That does not mean verbal corrections dont work, which is different from yelling, yelling for the dog means that you are barking along and that only feeds the excitement, you are then feeding what you are trying to avoid
I know its hard but you should not use his name when you are trying to correct him, that would mean that either having his name called means trouble or reward (when you practice recall) and that confuses the dog, a simple "hey" without yelling will do
The bottom line is to avoid for the dog to get to a point of excitement that will make it hard for you to re direct him after its too late, once you are there body blocks are still useful, but i mean body BLOCKS, like going down a little bit and opening your arms, like he can touch the other dog anymore, and yes maybe that will make you try for 5 minutes until he gets the idea but he will get the idea at the end, and most importantly will learn that when you body block you mean stop, usually some people after only 20 seconds trying to body block they give up and say "this is not working" and they are wrong, if they keep trying the dog gets it
If you see he is getting too excited then you remove him promptly from the situation, that means for him that over excitement means end of game, just like a puppy when he bites your hand and you remove yourself out of the room