huskymom
Posted : 9/22/2008 10:59:06 AM
mudpuppy
The danger of the dog knowing exactly what he will get when the whistle blows is he can then weigh in his mind "yummy freshly killed rabbit or tiny tin of dog food? hmm. Think I'll pass on the dog food today I haven't had a fresh rabbit for two years". Instead of thinking "yummy freshly killed rabbit or what? I wonder what mom has today- it might be better than rabbit I'll go see".
I think a husky mind goes a little more like this: "Yummy freshly killed rabbit or what? I wonder what mom has today? could be better than the rabbit, but it might not. Nope, I'll get the rabbit."
With the constant treat its like this: "Theres my whistle, a Cesar is gonna hit the ground in 2.2 seconds, I better be there to get it or somebody else will." it doesn't matter if the rabbit is better than the Cesar. The whistle causes a reaction. In the beginning when you train it, you blow the whistle, drop the treat to the dog and go about your business like nothing happened. The dog is left wondering why he got the treat. Its not for coming. It's just something that happens when the whistle is blown. So in the beginning when the whistle gets blown 3 times a week the dog begins to associate the two. After that when the whistle is blown less and less, the treat becomes more and more high value as its less frequent. At once a month, that Cesar has all of a sudden become a T-Bone steak. If you were to switch it up, it would make the dog wonder what he was going to get, adding thought to the reaction, and then the rabbit might be worth it.