Training in No Time
73 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Training in No Time , livre ebook

-

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
73 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

Training in No Time supplies the training regimen today's busy lifestyles demand for both owners and their dogs. It makes good use of how dogs learn and explains how to use that knowledge to establish and maintain the responses every dog owner wants.

The Sneakaway is the foundation of this training method. Quite literally, you turn your back and sneak away whenever your dog stops paying attention to you. This method allows for easy teaching and effective problem solving by first focusing your dog's undivided attention on you, even around the strongest distractions.

Then using daily, subtle clues you give your dog in everyday interactions, you can instill good habits The surest way to get permanent, positive results is to recognize and change the few big ambiguities that allowed problems to surface and to use daily, subtle clues to instill, not destroy, good habits. Behavior is being molded 24 hours a day. This results in consistent, socially acceptable behavior under all circumstances and a well-trained companion dog.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 21 avril 2008
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780470334157
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0450€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

TRAINING IN NO TIME
With a well-trained dog, you will never return home to a scene like this.
An Expert s Approach to Effective Dog Training for Hectic Life Styles
AMY AMMEN
Photographs by Jan Plagenz
Illustrations by Michelle Juergens
Macmillan General Reference
A Simon Schuster Macmillan Company
1633 Broadway
New York, NY 10019
Copyright 1995 by Amy Ammen
All rights reserved
including the right of reproduction
in whole or in part in any form
MACMILLAN is a registered trademark of Macmillan, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Ammen, Amy
Training in no time: an expert s approach to effective dog training for hectic life styles / by Amy Ammen; photos by Jan Plagenz; illustrations by Michelle Juergens.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-87605-778-4
1. Includes index. 2. Dogs-Training. 3. Dogs-behavior.
I. Title.
SF431.A44 1995
636.7 0887-dc20 94-37151
CIP
Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9
Dedicated to the memories of William R. Koehler, Job Michael Evans and Barbara Goodman, and to their expertise and unfailing willingness to share it.
During training, it is often helpful to use a cable, lead or similar link in the home to be able to get to a dog without having to lunge for him. And, it s a fact, a dog knows when it must listen.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Acknowledgments
1 Deliver a Big Message with Little Signals
Discovering the Core of Unwanted Behavior

Toxic Training

Strategy
2 Quality Versus Quantity

Dynamite Training Attitude

Obedience for Your Convenience
3 Compassionately Connected

Lovingly Denied

He s So Cute, He s Annoying

Coiffed and Content

Adequately Exercised

Scaring Fears Away

Selectively Pampered
4 Fair Play
5 What s the REAL Problem?

Get Analytical

Physical Problems

Inattention

Sneakaway from Problems

Misunderstanding Your Dog s Body Language

What s Wrong? Simply Nothing s Right

Temper Tantrums

Off-Leash Control

Preventative Dog Training

Problem-Solving System

Timing Is Everything Quiz
6 Social Studies

PART 1-VOCABULARY

Command-Training System

Sit-The Easiest Command, So Make the Demand

The Three Quickest Ways to Get Respect

Stay Frozen

Distance Stay

Out of Sight Stay

Wait Around

Come, Come Now

Down for the Count

Off: aka Get Your Paws Off and Don t Jump Up

Quiet, Please

Drop It

PART 2-MANNERS AND ETIQUETTE

Getting Ready for Visitors

Separation Anxiety

Submissive Urination

Good Manners on the Go

Begging, Stealing, Scavenging
7 The Good Dog Inside

Empowering Thoughts

Time to Behave

Intolerance Plus Love Equals Solutions
8 Oops! The Art of Making the Most of Mistakes

Four Stages of Learning

Index
There are many sides to a well-trained dog. If your pet is perfectly house-trained but goes through your garbage can like a preschooler through a toy chest, you need to go back to the drawing board.
INTRODUCTION
Thanks to my friend, Jacqueline Fraser, a misconception about me prevails. In the introduction of Dual Ring Dog, a book we coauthored, Jackie claimed I was blessed with grace and natural dog-training ability. Although I was initially proud that I fooled her, I have been haunted by that perception since. At the seminars I present to dog obedience trial competitors nationwide, doubters and insecure types believe only the gifted can duplicate my success.
While it s true that I began training at age 11, I owe my career to my initial ineffectiveness. You see, I attended my first obedience class out of desperation. I spent three months, four hours per week attending a beginners class with my first dog, Tess, a nine-month-old Siberian Husky. Unfortunately, upon completion, Tess was still digging, jumping, running away, biting and house soiling. To continue classes, I was forced to become a member of the sponsoring club and to pay for training by the year. Thanks to the encouragement of some fellow club members, 80 more hours of class and as much practice at home, I entered my first obedience competition. After all that preparation, Tess and I demonstrated exactly how disconnected a team could be while still attached by a leash.
In spite of my rocky beginnings, five years later I began instructing obedience classes. Seventeen students were enrolled in my first class; only one remained for graduation. Although by this time I was a successful trainer, and my dogs, including the Husky, achieved impressive wins, obviously I couldn t instruct humans. But I didn t stop trying, and today my instructors and I give lessons to hundreds of students per week through Amiable Dog Training School in Milwaukee.
Although never academically, athletically or socially inclined, I loved my dogs and was absorbed by them. I was 18 years old and had devoted seven all-consuming years to learning about dogs when Jackie and I met. So when Jackie-who, by the way, has the greatest zest for life and an uncanny mastery of vast and diverse talents-calls me a natural, I m inclined to protest. Ironically, in the introduction of Dual Ring Dog, Jackie, the horseback riding, deep-sea diving diva, presents herself as uncoordinated and clumsy.
Why do perfectly capable individuals deny their own accomplishments? To boast after arguing against our potential would be admitting we underestimate our capabilities. All of us-Jackie, you and I-have infinite potential waiting to be recognized.
Feeling like a failure while pursuing goals is typical. Don t use it as an excuse to give up. Everyone does have the ability to be a successful dog trainer in a fraction of the time it took Jackie and me to learn. Before you turn this page, acknowledge that you physically and mentally possess the makings of an outstanding dog trainer. Now that you ve freed your mind from limitations, sit back, read and let nature take its course.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My thanks to Jan Plagenz, Sandy Plagenz, Michelle Juergens, Bryan Garness, Nancy Garness, Kitty Foth and Lisa Moy. I needed your support in so many ways. None of you have ever let me down. I ll always be grateful, and I hope to be able to return the kindness, to all of you, my steadfast friends.
Also thanks to Elias and Michael and the good staff at The Cafe Knickerbocker, for allowing me to work on this manuscript hour after hour, for weeks on end, in The Classiest Cafe in the World.
Of course, thanks to my students for testing the validity of these methods and to the staff of Amiable Dog Training for making me look good when I had other obligations: Ed Bower, Denise Elger, Nancy Luecke, Ed Muraczewski, Patti Muraczewski, Bobbie Oxley, Patti Richards and Mary Steckle.
The children in the photographs-Alan, Elaine, Jennie and Robert Carsky-were perfect and so cooperative. When the kids become famous, Jan and Sandy Plagenz want everyone to know that they discovered them.
Using daily, subtle clues to instill good habits results in consistent, socially acceptable behavior under all normal circumstances for the well-trained companion dog.
CHAPTER 1
Deliver a Big Message with Little Signals
Are you looking for the magic cure for a nasty habit? Here s the secret: it s not one trick, harsh scolding or final beating that will correct a problem. Sure, occasionally an owner will do something just once and the dog will never misbehave again. I once heard of an owner attaching air-filled balloons to a door to stop her dog from scratching when she left the house. She returned to find a mass of popped balloons and the scratching never occurred again. Although this dog s bad habit has been successfully corrected, many other dogs might be temporarily frightened by the popping balloons but will continue scratching when the balloons are not in place. Often even worse behavior emerges, like excessive barking, destroying valuables or clawing woodwork, upholstery or drapery, to relieve the frustration of being left alone.
When seeking solutions to behavioral problems, owners are often advised to neuter, give more exercise or obedience train. While these are important components of an overall program, neutering doesn t teach a dog to come or stay clean indoors, exercising by itself will only give the dog more stamina for naughtiness, and practicing obedience routines in the backyard has little effect on house manners.
The surest way to get permanent, positive results is to recognize and change the few big ambiguities that allowed problems to surface and to use daily, subtle cues to instill, not destroy, good habits.
DISCOVERING THE CORE OF UNWANTED BEHAVIOR
Several years ago, an experienced obedience trial trainer attended my basic obedience class with her young Bouvier des Flandres. Brenda built a good foundation of control and was a diligent student. We kept in touch after the course, so I knew competitive training was progressing well, but apart from formal training sessions, Griz was untrustworthy off leash. Discouraged by experts who claimed Bouviers must always be leashed, Brenda became convinced Griz would never enjoy galloping freely as her older Collie does on their daily hikes through rural pastures. I reassured Brenda that no breed had a patent on problems and suggested ignoring trainers who would rather look for excuses than for solutions. After questioning Brenda about her techniques, I recommended some changes, but it wasn t until Brenda invited me to a dinner party that I confirmed my suspicions: Griz practiced commands, but had no manners.
Pulling into the driveway, Brenda s spouse, Greg, shouted parking instructions over Griz s barking. Since Griz s cable enabled him to run into my parking spot, Greg held Griz s collar as he warned me about the exuberant greeting I was about to receive. Sure enough, after Greg talked and stroked Griz until he was no longer hyperventilating, Greg released the collar and Griz now welcomed me with uninvited jumps, sniffs, dancing and kisses.
As guests gathered in the small kitchen, Brenda

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents