corvus
Posted : 11/2/2008 2:36:56 AM
What I'm saying is, whether I'm good at a clicker or not doesn't matter. I have my ways of communicating and the animals have theirs. As long as we come to some understanding in the middle then what does it matter what method was used?
I've been whining about clickers because I clicked with my hare every day for several weeks and I could see that he was thinking "so what?". He got it; he didn't care. Now that I have taught him something WITHOUT the clicker, I think it will be much easier to teach him with the clicker. Maybe I'll give it another go with him, maybe I won't. We'll see how we go. I also whined about clickers because I was finding my dog to be a bit sensitive and I was having trouble honing in on the degree of his sensitivity and what it meant to clicking. There's click and treat, which is all well and good, but obviously you have to pay attention to the particular animal. I could see that with Kivi I was confusing the situation, and I readily admit that I was the weakest link. You don't have to come down on me yet again over how crap my training methods are when you haven't even seen what I've done and how. Go take a look at the video I posted of my hare standing on his back legs on signal. It's in photos or something.
I'm the first to sing the praises of clicker training. I know that everything Kivi learns from clicker training sticks like glue in his little mind, especially if he thought it up all on his own. So I use that where I feel it will get me to my goal quickest and easiest and I use something else when it won't. I don't know why you think I have no training goals. I've never said I didn't. I always know what I'm after, even if the answer to that is to see what my animals want to do.
It's quite annoying when you keep speaking down to me as if I don't know what my animals want. I'm a zoologist. I did my honours thesis in behaviour. I know how to work out what an animal wants. In fact, working out what an animal wants is the greatest joy in sharing my life with animals in the first place. I also know how to read my animals, believe it or not. And I wholly accept that they are vastly better at reading me than I am at reading them. So I concentrate on being consistent and giving them as many clear cues as I can. I don't have a hare that can practically read my mind by bumbling about screwing up timing and using all the wrong rewards.
So once again, in case you missed it. I haven't given up on the clicker and I wasn't blaming it for my failure. I was trying to explore whether easy short-comings in a human were short-comings in a broader training method. I am sticking with the clicker and practicing, but I'm doing my hare method, too.
Finally, I haven't taken a class because there are none to take here and last time I went to a class of any kind the trainer eventually verbally abused me for asking about clickers in the first place and not wanting to use a no-pull harness. And that was a delta accredited trainer! I have since decided they can all go jump and I'll do things at home. Kivi sits, downs, stays, walks on a loose leash and has a decent recall (we suffered a setback when he abruptly decided he didn't like the treats he'd been doing backflips for yesterday and would prefer to play with dogs. We had to rewind and are still getting up to speed again.). He also knows back, touch and paw, and he responds pretty well to hold up, this way, this side, and hang about while on walks. I am working on firming up his stay and making his recall a conditioned response. I am happy with this. I train as I see the need. He's a great dog and my training methods you so despise have been working exactly as I intended them to. Thanks.