Liesje
Posted : 6/27/2008 6:10:00 PM
g8rfrog
Sounds like a pretty successful play session! Hang in there with him. Sometimes the baby steps needed are a LOT smaller than we want.
I think that it is the adventure of owning a rescue dog, learning their skills and their quirks. I got Oliver when he was three months old, but I suspect he may have been separated early or not been socialized enough as a very young pup. The first few months were a trial with him because he had very little bite inhibition. No amount of making loud noises, yelping or ignoring seemed to work on him - if anything it agitated him further. I finally put on some heavy sweats and employed NILIF - biting me makes me leave the room and ignore you until you calm down. It worked, but I have a shredded pair of pants and a top that prove it didn't happen overnight.
Oh boy! Luckily neither of our dogs have mouthed, but my uncle's dog on the other hand....of course he does nothing to train her otherwise but chase after her and yell at her, which to her is just a game....
DH and I had a chat about Coke and we agreed he needs more consistency and smaller steps so DH is going to come home from work on his break and work with him for 15 minutes a day. We agreed on what words we use so we are not confusing him. DH does not have the greatest timing, but he wants to be the one working with Coke so it will just be a slow process and they will learn together. We went to the pet store and he did SO much better than last time, though DH admitted to having a very bad day last time we went there to practice with Coke so that's probably why he got frustrated and Coke was all over the place before. Today he was walking nicely and being more police with strangers. Before, he would want to run up and greet everyone, but this time he did a sit and kept his excitement contained to a wagging tail. I took him on a shorter walk b/c it's so hot and he did really good, no pulling and he was focusing more (getting rewarded a lot of course). He would even sit when I stopped, which is something I never really taught him or required him to do on walks. I dropped the lead a few times with no problems.
As suggested I am doing tighter NILIF at home, though I might need some more ideas on what exactly to do. What I normally do is when he gets fed he has to go in his crate and wait, not jump on me and grab food (he has never done this anyway), and when he wants to go out he has to sit or stand by the door and, not push his way out (this he HAS done so we are strict about this one, it has been unintentionally reinforced by FIL walking out twice and leaving the door unlatched and wide open *smacks forehead*). On the walks if he is good for a block or so, I "release" him and let him sniff around and forge ahead a bit for the next block or so. If he starts pulling, his "free time" is over and he needs to be well-mannered for another block to get another "free time". I still give free access to his ropes, balls, and chew bones b/c he plays with Kenya with those things, but the stuffies and the new tug are kept away and only used when actively playing with us (ie, they are not chew toys and he cannot take them and destroy them as he pleases). He also has his favorite squeaker toy in the yard, but he doesn't show interest in that unless we are playing with him so I haven't had to take it away. I used to let him lick my plate when I was done, but now I set it on the table and he may only lick it if he doesn't barge over and do it before I say so. Usually I wait 15 minutes or so and if he hasn't invaded our space, I offer it to him and say "OK" (he only licks plates that are basically clean already). What am I missing?
I think DH is coming to class Monday night so I'll see if I can record Coke for some more input from you guys... or maybe the Justin thing will resolve itself, like when I posted about Kenya and the poop thing it never happened after I posted!