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Training Chain - Week 4 - ‘The Orbit’
What you’ll need - A happy, healthy dog. - Food/treats to reward - you’ll be holding food in both hands so make sure you have enough and don’t be cheap. - A clicker or verbal marker (doesn’t matter what your marker is. Just make sure it’s the same every time). - Phone or camera (or a friend to film). I recommend filming your sessions to identify what worked well and what didn’t. - Quiet, non-distracting space with good light - especially when starting out. Step-by-step Step 1 — Get a dog. Step 2 — Food in both hands. Hold a treat in each hand. Step 3 — Dog by your side — doesn’t matter which side. Start with the dog in a neutral standing position at your side if you need to. Step 4 — Lure from start to finish - Start by showing the lure (food) low near the dog’s nose and slowly move it to the target finished position (e.g., sit at your left). Keep the lure moving smoothly and clearly so the dog follows with their head and body. - Swap hands behind your back to keep a nice flowing movement. - Mark and reward only when the dog reaches the finished position. Click / “Yes!” the instant the dog is in the correct spot, then give the treat from the closest hand. Marking & rewarding — keep it clean 1. Always mark the finished position (click / “Yes!”) the instant it happens. Don’t mark early. 2. Reward from the closest hand so the dog learns the finish position - make sure you’ve got food readily available in both hands before starting the training session. 3. Avoid paying partway through 4. Don’t reward or let the dog take the treat while they’re still in motion or not in the finished position. If you reward mid-move, the dog may learn “get reward in the middle” — not what you want. If the dog makes a mistake 1. Correct with the lure: calmly place the lure back where it needs to be and guide them to the correct finish, then mark & reward. OR 1. Reset: Simply start the exercise again. Don’t get frustrated or tell your dog off - keep it neutral and short. If for whatever reason it’s just not happening then move on to something your dog knows how to do and end the session on a high.
Training Chain - Week 4 - ‘The Orbit’
Training Chain - Week 3 - learning names
For this weeks challenge I decided to pick learning names. This is a nice add on to the hold of the first challenge, as later on you can combine the two. The goal is that your dogs knows the names of different people. So the end picture would be you saying a name of a person in the room and the dog turns his face to the right person. This is the foundation to be able to use the names to send your dog to a certain person, search for a certain person or bring something to a certain person. Incase you dont have helpers near to help you, you can teach this with items instead. You will find an adaptation at the bottom. 1. Decide a person whose name you want to teach first. 2. Have the person standing next to your team. Both you and the helper have treats in a pocket. 3. Say the name of the person, followed by a pointing gesture to the person. As soon as the dog looks at the other person, the helper says something encouraging, does an inviting movement and opens the hand with a treat for the dog to grab. 4.The moment the dog takes the food, you mark/cheer, so the dog turns back to you and you pay with another treat. This way the dog learns, that after completing the task, he always and immediately comes back to you to get new instructions. 5. If the dog doesnt look around and doesnt turn to the person to begin with, the helper should make an inviting noise right after you said the name. If the dog now looks, he gets encouraged and paid by the helper. Mark and reward. 6. Practice this until the dog turns to the person without hesitance. 6. Gradually increase the distance between your team and the handler. (You can here add a second cue like „Go to…“, which will mean move to the right person, instead of only looking at the person.) 7. As soon as there is a distance depending on the excitement of the dog it can be handy to use a very short leash to hold the dog, so he doesnt anticipate, before completing the cue. He has to wait the whole cue „Go to Max“ and not start running after just hearing „Go to..“. This will be important when you add other names, so the dog doesnt start running before even hearing the name of the right person :)
Training Chain - Week 3 - learning names
Training Chain ~ Week 2 ~ “Around”
My turn to pick a training challenge this week and it was hard to pick as I’m unsure of everyone’s training level. You’ll have to excuse my poor form as I’ve injured my shoulder this week and also video jitters as I’m always behind the camera. 😅 I’ve added a basic guide, but I understand there’s so many ways to teach things and all dogs learn differently. Watch your dog and how they learn, slow down if needed and take each session as it comes, no rush. My chosen challenge is sending your dog around an object from any distance. Once learned, a cue is added and you have some distance ~ pick a variety of environments, ground (grass, concrete, etc) to build a solid behaviour. Use different objects for your dog to go around. Tree, washing line, water bottles, etc, get creative and have fun! 👏 Can’t wait to see your videos. I nominate @Nora Latzke to pick a new challenge for Friday the 21st November. —————————————————————————————— 🔹 STEP 1 — Introduce the Object (No Cue Yet) Goal: Dog willingly moves around the object with a lure. 1. Stand very close to the object. 2. Hold a treat at your dog’s nose and lure them in a wide arc around the object. 3. As soon as they complete the loop → mark (“yes!”) → reward. 4. Be slow and smooth with the lure. 🔹 STEP 2 — Fade the Lure Into a Hand Signal Goal: Dog follows your hand even without a treat in it. 1. Repeat the same motion around the object 2. This time your hand is empty 3. Reward when the dog completes the loop You’re teaching: Follow the hand movement, not the food. Alternate having an empty hand and a treat in your hand so you’re unpredictable but they know they still get the treat. 🔹 STEP 3 — Add the Cue “Around!” Goal: Dog starts the behaviour when hearing the cue. 1. Say “Around!” ( or whatever word you wish to use) 2. Immediately make the hand motion 3. Dog goes → mark → treat 4. After several reps, start giving the cue before the hand signal. 5. Then slowly make your hand signal smaller.
Training Chain ~ Week 2 ~ “Around”
Training Chain Week 3
Hi everyone! Just letting you know there is a new post in our training chain! I’ll pin it at the top so it’s easy to find. It’s super fun and creative so get involved to keep this community active and buzzing 🐾🙌🏻
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Training Chain Week 3
⭐️ Training chain
Alright team, let’s start something fun! Let’s play a game called Training Chain 🐾 Here’s how it works: ✅ On Fridays, one person posts a training exercise for everyone to try with their dogs for the week. ✅ It can be anything, trick, skill, enrichment idea, confidence game, just make sure every dog can take part and we don’t need special equipment. ✅ You can share a video demo or just describe the exercise ✅ We all practice it during the week and post our progress in the comments of the original challenge post ✅ Tag the next person at the end of your post so they can prepare an exercise for the following week ✅ Keep the chain going! ⛓️🐶 Let’s build the most inspiring little chain of training and positivity 🙌 Can’t wait to see what you all come up with! Ready? GO! 👇
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