T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1712.1 | Make putting on the leash fun, too! | MAIL2::LABUDDE | Cool four-letter word | Fri Jan 06 1995 11:49 | 8 |
1712.2 | Just keep him on the leash? | SPIKED::SWEENEY | Tom Sweeney in OGO | Fri Jan 06 1995 12:10 | 3 |
1712.3 | Use a reward, make it a game. | MKOTS3::KERR | That's Sir Eric, By The Way | Mon Jan 09 1995 13:26 | 25 |
1712.4 | variation on .3 | DECWET::WALP | Koyannisqatsi! | Mon Jan 09 1995 14:17 | 5 |
1712.5 | i use a hot dog | MPGS::ANDRUS | We're 106 miles from Chicago... | Mon Jan 09 1995 14:50 | 9 |
1712.6 | Heeling without a leash | MILKWY::UTTLEY | It won't mean a thing in 100 years | Mon Feb 17 1997 13:38 | 21 |
| I have been trying very hard for the last 6 months or so to train a
very difficult dog. I have made some good progress, but there are
still some things that I just can't seem to make her understand. I
got her so she now walks very well on a leash. On the house, I can get
her to sit and stay and come to me on command with no problem.
However, if I take her off of the leash outdoors, she just runs off.
Over the weekend I took her to a large somewhat secluded field. After
walking her around a bit and making her heel, I unclipped the leash and
tried it. As soon as she is unhooked, she no longer listens to a word
I say. I ended up trying to get her back for almost half an hour. In
that time she ran across thin ice, almost ran out to the street (which
was a long distance away) and then found a rotting animal carcass in
the woods and rolled all over it. I finally caught her by hiding
behind a big tree and tackleing her when she ran by. Then I had to
take her home all smelly and give her a bath. How do you make a dog
listen once you release physical control (the leash)? With my last dog
it was simple. Once she learned to heel, she always heeled, leash or
not, until I told her that she could run around. Even then she would
stay near by.
Dave
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1712.7 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Mon Feb 17 1997 14:19 | 15 |
| Dave,
How old is this dog, and how old was she when you got her? Is she or
does she have ancestors who were sight hounds? (Greyhound, wolfhounds,
afghans, salukis, seem to need clearly defined boundries in my
experience.) Maybe working with her in a large ballfield or other area
where there is a fence, but more space than in a yard on come, sit,
stop might help. From what you wrote, the trick one of my friends and
I used on our dogs when they started roaming further afield when we
took them off lead wouldn't help. We hid from the dogs behind trees,
bushes, rocks, in ditches and whatever when they would get beyond fifty
feet from us. They hang pretty close to us now, and always come when
called, even with non-maskable interrupts like a cotton tail flushing.
meg
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1712.8 | Not exactly sure | MILKWY::UTTLEY | It won't mean a thing in 100 years | Mon Feb 17 1997 14:49 | 19 |
| Meg,
Nikki is (as far as I know) 15 months old now, and was 8 months old
when I adopted her. She came from a shelter and there was no
background info, so I'm not totally certain of anything. She is
definately part German Shepard, but I don't know what else. She has
the typical German Shepard markings and big ears, but has a slightly
smaller frame a curly tail. I don't think there is any hound in the
mix.
I just don't have convienient access to a fenced field. The
field that I tried using is somewhat secluded; water on 2 sides, a
strip of woods on one side, and some big rocks on the other, and it is
larger than a baseball field. I should add that she WILL listen if I
have some sort of food with me, but without that, it is like I'm not
even there. I miss my Pit Bull. She was absolutely the best dog I
ever met. I feel like I'm now dealing with her evil opposite.
Dave
|
1712.9 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Mon Feb 17 1997 15:11 | 20 |
| Dave,
We refer to that as the Sainted dog syndrome ;-)/2
St Iris (my chow) "never" got into the kind of trouble that Sonja, the
broccoli brained samoyed has. 12 years erased the memory of the $80
pair of sandals belonging to a roomate she ate, the night she got into
the fishguts and had digestive upsets all over the house, the time she
ignored me to harrass a forest ranger on a mule, having to move the
mailbox off the porch because the mailman surprised her when her sight
was failing.... But I sympathize.
I guess the only thing to do would be maybe to try her out with making
friends with a dog who doesn't freak out when off lead. I think having
taken walks with Cougar from a very early age is one reason Sonja
"listens" and is actually better behaved off-lead than on. Either that
or it is the doggie pack I put on her and load up with rocks when she
and I are out alone. ;-)
meg
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1712.10 | teach to come and stay around. | CSCMA::SMITH | | Mon Feb 17 1997 15:56 | 19 |
| If she listens when you have food, use that to train her. Call her
everytime she gets a short distance away, give her a treat, let her
wander off again till she's the short distance away again, call her and
give her a treat, let her wander away again, etc. Establish a certain
distance boundary, she'll start waiting for your call to get her treat.
Make it a game.
In your case you might have to start in the house first, if you can't do
it outside, just to get her coming. Right now she thinks every time you
catch her it's bad and she must avoid it, she needs to know you will
just pet her and she can go again.
This is also a good way to establish boundaries in the yard.
After a bit you start giving them food only some of the times
they come. In time, coming when you call and staying in the boundary
becomes a habit, they'll forget why they do it, they just do.
Sharon
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1712.11 | | CPCOD::JOHNSON | Many barely noticed miracles surround us | Mon Feb 17 1997 17:16 | 6 |
| And sometimes you simply cannot ever give them their freedom except
in fenced in areas. A flexi-leash will give such a dog a little more
play, but keep them under control.
Leslie
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1712.12 | Rope lead | MAIL1::LABUDDE | www.tangled.web.com | Tue Feb 18 1997 09:38 | 11 |
| Try using a very long lead, maybe even a rope or long flexi-lead.
Let her get about fifty feet away -- far enough where she thinks she's
free and then call and gently tug her back. Hopefully you can condition
her into thinking that she is always under your control.
Last resort may have to be an electronic training collar.
Good luck,
James
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1712.13 | Good ideas | MILKWY::UTTLEY | It won't mean a thing in 100 years | Tue Feb 18 1997 13:17 | 5 |
| Thanks for the suggestions everyone. I especially like the 50' rope
idea. I think I'll go buy some rope and give it a try. I'd be willing
to try almost anything at this point :^)
Dave
|
1712.14 | Unclip = FREEDOM! | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Wed Feb 19 1997 08:37 | 13 |
| I think part of the conditioning involves the unclipping of the leash.
My cairn KNOWS when I unclip that leash that she is free, free, free
and she needs to make a break for it. You might want to condition the
dog against that action by clipping and unclipping the leash in a
controlled environment, including the house. Also try having a back-up
leash - unclip one but keep control of the other so if he/she bolts
when the first leash is unclipped you've still got him/her on a leash.
Some dogs simply cannot be trusted off-lead. My cairn is one of them.
My shelties, however, never need a leash - they always stay exactly
where they are supposed to be, directly behind and to the side. No
training was ever needed. It's so helpful to have two of the three dogs
stay where they are supposed to be, so I can concentrate on "Houdini".
Sarah
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1712.15 | | USCD::mko-ras-port-3.mko.dec.com::Heuss | Forward into the past.... | Thu Feb 20 1997 07:32 | 46 |
| Bottom line is, if your dog is not reliable off leash, you should NEVER let her
off leash unless she's in a completely enclosed area. Every time you let her
off lead you risk her life!
Dogs know when they are restrained and when they aren't and their behavior will
change. Even with a flexi or long line, you will not build a reliable recall.
The only thing that will build a reliable recall is if she WANTS to come to you
more than anything else in the world, including running around like an banshee
or chasing that squirrel.
You need to work on motivational recalls. Start inside. Make it fun. You need
to be willing to act pretty foolish during this, and to be very patient. This
won't happen overnight, so be prepared to work on it for quite a while, and then
continue to work on it for the rest of her life. Being off lead is a dangerous
situation and you need to make 1000% sure that she will come when you call
BEFORE you let her off lead in an open area.
Use food initially, or toys. With the dog on leash, call her. If she doesn't
come, pull her gently toward you, and when she comes treat her and give her lots
of praise. After a number of repetitions of this, instead of pulling, just give
her a quick check and when she turns her head to come to you, run backwards
making the silliest noises you can. She'll most probably chase you and when she
catches you, crouch down with lots of pats, praise and treats. Basically you
want to turn recall into a chase game so that it's more fun for her to chase you
than to do anything else.
Leave her on lead until she reliably turns and chases you. You do this so that
you can issue a quick check if she ever forgets. Increase the levels of
distraction. At first just call her, then call her away from a person who is
sitting on the floor talking to her, then call her away from a person who is
teasing her with treats, then call her away from a person who is feeding her. If
you can find heavier distractions than that, use them!! When she comes away
from everything reliably, take her off lead and keep practicing.
Change your location if possible. Get her used to comming to you from a variety
of distractions in a variety of locations. Above all, continue to make it fun
and rewarding for her.
Once you are 100% sure; Willing to bet $1,000,000.00 on EVERY recall, only then
should you be willing to let her off lead in an unfenced area. You may never
get there, but if you don't, don't feel bad. This is deadly serious stuff for
her and you owe it to her to protect her, since she really can't protect
herself.
Good luck,
Dave
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1712.16 | my way | PASTA::PIERCE | The Truth is Out There | Fri Feb 21 1997 10:13 | 34 |
|
This is what worked for us. We adopted a abused Dal, who was kept on a
6ft leash for the 1st yr of his life. He never got walked or taking in
a car, he just lived on a 6ft leash. Like any living thing, he would
want to get off the leash and run free - when he did, he got beatten
all they way back home - so he learned not to get caught and not to go
home. When we got him, he vowed never to put him on a leash.
I worked w/ horses, so I got a large Lunge whip. When in the house I
would stand far away from him and I would *crack* the whip so he could
hear the snap - then I would give him a command.
He got so that when ever he heard the snap, he would stop and listen to
my command.
I then took him outside and right when I got him outside, I cracked the
whip good (not hitting him and not close to him) He stood up and he
listend. I would keep asking for commands from him (sit, stay etc) and
if he did not listen I cracked the whip.
I only had to do this a few times, and never left the yard and I can
take him and my Female anywhere and they stay right by me.
I live in a small neighborhood and they houses are very close and
people allways walk their dogs and my two just sit on the edge of their
yard looking at them walk by.
Every few months if I notice they are starting to try and take
advantage of me, I just bring out the whip and lean it against the car
so they can see it - and that is all it takes.
People allways stop by and tell me what good dogs I have.
Lou
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