Chuffy
Posted : 1/21/2007 4:43:39 PM
It will only hurt her if she is lunging on it or you're yanking on it, so if she is already pulling less I wouldn't worry. And as for all the contradictions..... they say the only thing two dog trainers will agree on is that the third one is wrong! And it's very true!
Tip: Any time you stop or any time you see anything like another dog, person, great big lorry, cat, children, horse..... anything that might trigger her to be scared or excited, get her attention on you with the help of a treat and the headcollar and get her to sit - if she's already "locked on" to something you've left it too late! Give yourself the advantage of distance so she has the best chance of success. Give it as wide a berth as you can so you can keep her focussed on you, over time you won't need to be far from it at all and she will find it fairly easy to still pay attention to you.
This will do 3 things:
1. It will gradually lower any reactivity she has to external "triggers" and will teach her a positive association with them (I'm assuming you don't know how much socialisation she's had)
3. It will teach her to focus on you when she sees them - if you are consistent she should eventually generalise it to anything new that she is unsure of.
3. It will mean she does not get the opportunity to lunge towards something she wants to investigate, risking hurting herself on the headcollar.
I would do this with any new dog or puppy I had now, it's so simple and easy to do and so generally useful. It's helped prevent our staffy mix becoming a cat chaser and helped her cope with traffic which she used to find scary. Any time she sees something shes not sure of she sticks close and sits, watching it and us. I really think its helped her be more responsive to us in general even in the most distracting of situations.