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How to greet a puppy   One puppy behavior that cannot be taught without help is how to meet new people.  Each of us need...
04/05/2017

How to greet a puppy One puppy behavior that cannot be taught without help is how to meet new people. Each of us needs interactions with novel people so that our puppies can practice appropriate greetings and learn that people are fun and not frightening. I have wrestled quite a bit with whether or not to blog about this: I do not want to seem condescending or strident, and this is information most readers of this blog will likely be very certain they already know! However, for the past few months I have been taking a puppy around to socialize and meet lots of people, and I have been reminded over and over again how many people out there—even people with extensive dog experience and great intentions—interact with puppies in ways that are problematic.

So please do not take this as scolding, but as an opportunity for us all to pause and think about how we can help one another… And do not interpret any of this to mean you should not interact with puppies—it is very much appreciated when you take a few minutes to help us socialize! But puppies learn very quickly, and it does not take many bad encounters to have a significantly negative impact. So give a little thought to how you can be a positive influence.

Here are a few thoughts:

Things to do:
•Have a conversation—the single best step you can take to making your interaction beneficial for the puppy is to have a conversation with the owner before you do anything with the puppy. Ask them about how they want the interaction to go, what things to avoid, what to encourage. No two puppies are identical, and what would be super helpful with one puppy might be quite harmful with another. You do not know their goals, their issues, you must ask!
•Listen to the owner—no matter how knowledgeable you may be, you do not know what this owner and dog want. You must carefully listen to what they tell you.
•Listen to the dog—observe the dog closely while interacting. If it is intimidated by what you are doing, back off. If it is pulling back or trying to avoid you, stop. If it is getting too excited and frenetic, slow your actions and reduce your energy. This is not a contest to get the dog to love you the most, it is a long process to get the dog to react to new people the way the owner wants.
•Start easy, get harder—you can always increase the intensity and difficulty, but if you come on too strong it is very difficult to undo.
•Be calm but friendly—almost nobody wants a dog that goes crazy and gets frantic when it meets new people.
•When in doubt, ignore—if you are not sure; if a puppy seems nervous or hyper or whatever, and you are not sure what the owner would like, the safest path is to ignore the puppy while you ask the owner.
•You are not entitled—this is not your puppy. Sometimes the owner way not want the puppy to meet you at all. Or may want you to ignore the puppy. You do not know what that they may be working on at any given moment, so do not take it personally if it does not involve you…

Things to avoid:
•Too much energy—many dog lovers coming rushing in and start frenetically playing. This is overwhelming to some puppies, but to many it simply creates an expectation that greetings are supposed to be super-high-energy, which is almost never what an owner wants. Calm, friendly, thoughtful greetings are far more desired by most owners. After the initial greeting is over, many owners will appreciate your having a good play session with their puppies, but initially calm is much better than too energetic.
•Telling them to sit, sit, sit—this is a very well-intended recent trend. Lots of pet owners and Petco trainers, learned the idea that a great way to avoid jumping up is to reinforce an incompatible behavior, and so they ask every puppy to sit. And in truth, this might be a fine trend, except that most people do it poorly. Their timing is awful.
•Approaching too directly—when you see a puppy and immediately rush straight towards it, think about how this looks to the puppy.
•Petting them on the top of the head—some dogs love this, some owners want to work on this, but in general, most dogs would prefer if you do not start out petting them on their heads.
•Grabbing them or pulling them towards you—most dogs have a natural opposition reflex, especially to being pulled towards a stranger.
•Petting them roughly—many puppies do not want to be whacked, tousled, slapped, etc.
•Correcting them—unless we have discussed it, you do not know the rules I have taught my puppy. So if he paws at you that may be exactly what I trained him to do. If he jumps up on you, or mouths your hand, or lies down, or stands, whatever he does, you should not correct unless you know it is something he is not supposed to do…
•Pushing them too far—I was at a seminar recently with my puppy, and he was having a great time meeting new people in a new place with lots of dogs and commotion. And a lady came over, sat down, and started harassing him. Grabbing his feet, lifting him up, grasping his testicles… And she kept it up until he was trying to get away from her and she would not let him get away. All the while she was explaining to me how much people appreciate her playing with their puppies, how she desensitizes them to lots of strange things, how she is beloved as a molester of puppies. It is not your job to torment my puppy. If I want or need my puppy to have that experience, I will ask someone I know and trust. I might even ask you, but it is not your place to decide to push my puppy.
•Your adult dog correcting them—unless we have discussed it in advance, I do not want my puppy to have negative experiences with other dogs. If you are not 100% sure that your dog is great with puppies, please stay away. Many people bring their dogs over to meet my puppy and when I ask if their dog is good with puppies, they tell me they do not know. Do not experiment with my puppy. A bad experience can cause issues that will take years to resolve or may never be undone. Oh, and noise counts. I have had several people tell me their dogs are good with puppies, then their dog reacts negatively and growls, barks or otherwise tells off my puppy, and they say, “See, she doesn’t ever make contact…” Contact is not the issue—I am far more concerned about psychological trauma then physical trauma, so if your dog is not welcoming and benevolent tell me so I can keep my puppy away!
•Your dog being too forward—If your dog loves puppies and people and comes rushing up into my puppy’s space, there is a good likelihood that my puppy will be frightened. MAny puppies are sensitive to pressure, particularly from adult dogs. Keep your dog under control and a bit away, and let me bring the puppy over. This way the puppy can approach at his pace and not get overwhelmed.
•Your dog being too interested in me—many puppies are a little insecure and even jealous about their owner. If your dog comes running in and greets me super enthusiastically, it may be negative for my puppy.
•Your dog making things negative—I was practicing tunnels with my puppy when someone else came in and let their puppy say hello. Which was great. But every time my puppy tried to go into a tunnel, theirs would blast in after him, sometimes same direction, sometimes opposing, and would either knock my puppy over or just startle him. Later I was working my puppy on a table, and she encouraged her dog to jump up and essentially knock him off the table. These actions made my puppy far less confident about tunnels and tables—he is not sure another dog will not come knock him down…
•Playing keep away—I am a little flabbergasted when people come up and take my puppy’s toy and don’t give it back. What is this game supposed to be? It is just obnoxious. Sure, you can tease the puppy, move the toy quickly, but the goal is to get the puppy to try harder and when they do try hard, they should win! If you want a toy, go get one, but that toy is my puppies, so if you are going to play with it make sure you do it in a way that is pleasing to my puppy.
•Pretending to throw something—much like keep away, I am not really sure what people think they are doing. Yes, if you try you can fool the puppy. Bravo for you. But you are diminishing the puppy’s desire to fetch and decreasing his inclination to trust humans.
•Tugging on their toy too hard—although it may not always feel like it, puppies have small teeth and weak jaws, and we do not want tug to be unpleasant.
•Intruding on training—if I am not looking at you, and am clearly working on something with my puppy, do not talk to me. Do not talk to my puppy. Do not call my puppy. Leave us alone, or wait until we are done and approach you.
•Following—if you are approaching and I head the other way, don’t chase me down. It likely means that my puppy is not in the mood to meet you, or that your dog is frightening my puppy, or that for some other reason I do not want to interact with you right now.
•Picking them up—I cannot believe how many people think it is ok to run in and pick up a puppy that they hardly know. How would you like it if someone did this to you? Being held is an act of trust. Do not pick up a puppy until you have cleared it with both the owner and the puppy.
•Making lots of baby noises—a surprising number of people squeal and grunt and goo-goo and screech when they see a puppy. This is probably not a huge deal to the puppy either way, but it is really annoying to me, so please stop it.

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Animal Training 101 .   Obviously I cannot cover all of animal training in a single article.  In this post, I am going t...
23/04/2017

Animal Training 101
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Obviously I cannot cover all of animal training in a single article. In this post, I am going to discuss the basic idea of training. What it is and basically how it works. In later posts we will go into much greater depth on training specific behaviors. Training animals can be challenging, but is also immensely rewarding, and the dividends for both you and your animals will grow dramatically as you put more time into their training.skate

What is animal training?

In broad terms, everything you do with an animal is training. Animals are always learning; therefore, you are always teaching, even if you do not mean to be. In a more formal sense, animal training is a series of procedures you follow in order to alter an animal’s behavior. All animals possess certain natural behaviors which you shape into specific behaviors or chains of behaviors that you want the animal to perform on cue. You increase the frequency and intensity of desired behaviors and decrease the frequency and intensity of undesired behaviors.

What are the goals of training an animal?
1.Teach specific boundaries
2.Teach specific behaviors
3.Refine social relationships
4.Refine working attitude
5.Habituate usage of the thinking portion of his brain
6.Develop his character

Many trainers focus at the top of this list, believing that training is primarily about boundaries and behaviors. Over time, good trainers tend to shift their focus more and more towards the bottom of the list, realizing that teaching specific behaviors and boundaries is easy and that the real skill is to use your training time to develop your animal’s character and attitude and the relationship you want with him.

Refining social relationships means that you are constantly aware of the relationship you have with your animal and use your training time to polish this dynamic. You use training to make sure your animal respects and enjoys your leadership. That he trusts your decisions. That he wants to please you. Each time he performs as requested and the outcome is positive he becomes more confident in your leadership.

You must constantly be aware of your animal’s attitude, energy, and focus: you need to induce the state that you want, and only train while you are able to maintain your animal in that state. If you want a bright, enthusiastic animal, do not train when he is tired and flat. For me, training is always the best part of the day: we have a great time, and we are always engaged in a fun game. My animals love nothing more than figuring out what they have to do to get the reward.

Animals are reactive. Many of their responses naturally occur without thought. One of the central objectives in training an animal is to develop the habit of thinking before acting. “Thoughtfulness” works much like a muscle-the more it is used the stronger it becomes. So in training we rehearse mindfulness: we present a stimulus and facilitate our animal’s thoughtful response.

You must also remain aware of the character you want to develop in your animal. What you rehearse regularly in training you will see blossom in his daily demeanor. You may spend time developing patience, independent problems solving skills, confidence, and attention span. You may work to get him more focused on you, or less. Balance is essential here. Constantly evaluate your animal and your relationship and structure your training sessions to approach your objectives.

Origins of modern animal training

Humans have been training animals for over 3,000 years, but modern training techniques have developed primarily in the last century. Bypassing the complex history of behavioral psychology, two key concepts have largely defined modern animal training:

Classical conditioning, made famous by Ivan Pavlov (Russian physiologist and physician, 1849-1936): if you pair a neutral stimulus (say, the ringing of a bell) with a positive stimulus (say, a valued treat) you can condition the animal to respond to the neutral stimulus in the same manner as he responds to the positive stimulus. (Or the converse-pairing a negative with a neutral stimulus)

Operant conditioning, commonly associated with B.F. Skinner (American psychologist 1904-1990): an animal will repeat with increasing frequency and intensity those behaviors which result in positive consequences, and will repeat with decreasing frequency those behaviors which result in negative or neutral consequences. Almost all of animal training derives from that simple notion!

What skills are required to train animals well?
•Responsibility: animals behave naturally; all training is up to the trainer, not the animal.
•Body language: animals are very aware of your body. In many ways they will listen more to what your body says than to what your mouth says. So always be mindful of what your body is saying.
•Excellent observational skills: see everything the animal is doing and note all the factors contributing to what the animal is experiencing. See when to bolster, when to stop, when to encourage, etc.
•Imagination: always see how things look to the animal.
•Understanding of the science underlying behavior and behavior modification.
•Mastery of the mechanical skills required.
•Great timing and reflexes: praise at the right moment and you increase the behavior you like, praise a second early or late and you get something else entirely.
•Ability to trust and to engender trust in animals
•Creativity and flexibility: something is not working; what else can you do to get the behavior?
•Calmness and emotional self control: reactions in training must always be dictated by the desired effect and outcome, never by anger or frustration.
•Acting ability: you need to be able to act unhappy or disappointed or ecstatic as needed.
•Consistency: the more you can repeat your patterns identically, the more easily your animal will be able to learn.
•Patience: sometimes it seems like simple things take forever to train. Breathe, relax. It may take a little while, but he will get it…
•Energy: you will generally get from an animal what you put in, and if you need a high energy behavior, you need to be energetic. And you need to be able to play games and keep your animal’s attention at all times.
•Training Intuition: the art comes in knowing which technique to use when, and in subtly blurring the techniques together to respond to your animal’s mood and state.

How to train a new behavior

There are many different techniques to train an animal, and there are countless variations on these techniques depending on the individual animal and the precise behavior being trained. However, the underlying process is surprisingly constant. Without being present I do not know your animal, so you need to determine which techniques are effective and safe in training him. If you understand these basic components of training, you can modify them to teach almost anything:

Evaluate your animal’s drives and reinforcers: before you can do anything else, you need to get to know your animal. What motivates him? What does he find rewarding? When does he have energy? Does he have a strong opposition reflex? Is he easily bored or overstimulated? Everything you do in training is predicated on your knowing his prefences and attitudes so you can manipulate them.

Condition a secondary reinforcer: all this means is that before you start training, you must teach your animal a special signal that means, “Yes, that was what I wanted and I am going to give you a reward!” This secondary reinforcer can be a word like “yes”, a sound, a click, whatever you would like. And all you do to condition this reinforcer is make the sound and give a reward, over and over. Use a valued reward like a yummy treat, and do this many times each day until your animal understands that the sound means a treat is coming!

Determine the behavior precisely: You cannot effectively communicate your desire to your animal until you know exactly what you desire. If you want the animal to come when called, does that mean come close or come and sit in front? Does it mean he must run or just come at any pace? If more than one person gives the animal commands, make sure you all agree what the commands are going to be and what they are going to mean. Do not use these commands except when training until they are well understood. Even when they are understood, these should be sacred words that you expect your animal to always react to. Do not use these words to mean other things. If you are teaching that “Come” means run to you and sit in front, then do not say “Come” when you really mean ignore the squirrel and keep walking down the trail with me.

Induce the behavior: In this phase you use your creativity to get the animal to perform the desired activity. You are not asking or telling the animal what to do. You are luring him into it. For instance, if you want a sit, you can hold food so that the animal lifts his head and naturally sits. There are many different ways to induce the animal. You can lure with food or a toy. You can use props, a piece of tape behind an ear, for example, to teach the animal to scratch. You can use the environment: walking along next to a wall so the animal has to stay close to you when heeling. You can even wait until the behavior occurs naturally. During this phase do not say “No” or correct any behaviors your animal offers. He does not know what you want and is trying his best to please. This phase is best done away from all distractions so your animal is focused on you. Be calm and patient and try to enjoy the challenge of communicating with your animal. Set him up to succeed. Over time, as your animal begins to understand the behavior, gradually reduce the lure until he is doing the behavior without any help.

Bridge: In traditional usage, a bridge is a tool used to tell the animal that you like what he is doing and that a reward is coming. I suggest a slightly different technique: using four distinct bridges. While this may sound complex – and will likely take a few days for you to master – it can significantly improve training results. You can use whatever sound or sight you prefer for each of the bridges. Here are the ones I use:
•Terminal positive bridge: “Yes!” This is the secondary reinforcer that you conditioned at the beginning. It tells the animal that he did it right and that the behavior is over. It is almost always followed by a primary reinforcer. (Timing is critical when giving this signal because the animal will tend to repeat whatever he was doing at the precise moment this occurred.)
•Intermediate positive bridge: “Good!” This tells the animal that you like what he is doing and he should keep doing it or even increase the intensity of what he is doing. It can be repeated indefinitely until it is followed by a terminal positive bridge, and is like saying “warmer” when playing “hot-cold” games.
•Intermediate negative bridge: “Aaatt.” Not strictly a bridge, this is a way of telling the animal that what he is doing at the moment is not going to get him to the reward. It is like saying “colder” when playing “hot-cold” games.
•Terminal negative bridge: “Nope.” Not strictly a bridge, this is a way of telling your animal that what he did was not what you wanted and the behavior is over and you are going to reset and start over.

Reward the behavior: Once you have given a terminal positive bridge, reward the animal. Be creative. And be enthusiastic in the right proportion and at the right energy level to keep him excited and focused but not frantic. At this point you are telling the animal that you like it when he performs the behavior, so be expressive. Give food, praise, etc. Throw a ball, play tug, whatever will be authentically rewarding to your animal.

Associate the behavior with a cue: Once the animal has started performing the behavior without too much luring, start associating a cue. You are still helping the animal at this point, but as the animal performs the behavior, you say the word and/or give the signal. Any time you give a cue and then allow your animal to ignore it, you are training your animal to ignore you. So only give the cue once and then induce the animal to perform. If your animal does not perform the behavior, do not simply repeat the cue: go back a step and get the animal to perform.

Proof the behavior: During this phase you ask the animal to perform the behavior in increasingly difficult situations. You probably started at home. Now you may try it amidst gentle distractions. Then at the park but away from other animals. Then near other animals. It should still be fun and upbeat. Do not introduce excessive distractions too soon. If your animal is too distracted, go back to a less distracting environment and reinforce the behavior. Increase the duration, intensity, and distraction and then increase the distance at which he can perform.

Reinforcement schedules: There has been much debate about the ideal schedule of reinforcement. Should you reinforce every time? Every few times? Randomly? Only the best performance, etc. Science generally suggests that a variable schedule will work best, but many trainers feel a 1:1 schedule works best. There are volumes written on the topic, but here is the short answer: do what feels and works best with your animal. Start with a 1:1, and vary it slightly from there. Sometimes skip a few; other times give a huge jackpot for a particularly good performance. Observe which schedule seems to most increase your animal’s motivation and do what works!

However, one place that people err is in not varying the bridge as well. What I mean is this: if you execute a terminal positive bridge you should also provide a primary reinforcer. If you are not going to reinforce, also do not bridge.

Correct non-performance of the behavior: Correcting your animal for not doing what you asked is a last resort. It means that you have failed somewhere in the preceding phases. So go back and fix your mistake and do not hurry!

Talking about corrections is always difficult because many people have such a strong position on the issue that they do not want to hear anything else. However, regardless of how you feel about corrections in general, with animals corrections are generally counterproductive. First of all, animals will often learn mistrust after a single event. Second, the corrected animal tends to very quickly lose interest in training and become unwilling to try new behaviors.

The solution to this is often to use “negative punishment” to reduce the frequency of non-compliance: if an animal understands a behavior and refuses to do what is asked, they lose the opportunity to get the treat or to play the game. Generally this means they are put away in a crate and watch another animal work and get treats and praise. This has several positive ramifications: the animal’s desire to play the training game is built up and up; they come to envy the other animal and really want to do better next time, they observe the other animal performing the behavior, etc.

Every bit as counterproductive as overcorrection is under-correction or nagging. If you are not happy with a behavior, you need to communicate effectively to your animal. If you allow him to continue doing the behavior you create confusion, and if you repeatedly object but do nothing about it, he will learn to ignore you, will respect you less, and will be annoyed by your nagging. So make sure that when you do correct something you are effective.

Put your animal away: many people finish up a training session and then give their animal dinner, or go for a walk, or sit with them and rub their bellies. I suggest the opposite. When you are finished with a training session, put your animal in a crate to think about what you just worked on for a little while. You do not want them to anticipate the end of training because they get a big reward; you want the training session to be the reward-the best game possible-and you do not want them then to become immediately distracted.

A few secondary techniques that may help:
•Successive approximations and increasing criteria: If the behavior is difficult, you may want to reward approximations. Reward the animal for doing something close to the desired behavior and then increase your expectations gradually. Over time, raise your criteria for successful performance.
•Backwards chaining: If the behavior is complex, you need to break it down into parts and train them individually, starting with the last component first. For instance, if you want the animal to stop what it is doing, turn towards you, run to you, sit in front, and look into your eyes, you would start by teaching the animal to look into your eyes. Then you would teach it to sit in front and look into your eyes. Then to take a few steps and sit in front and look into your eyes, etc.
•Pressure: animals are extremely sensitive to pressure and the release of pressure. Stepping into their space, moving suddenly, staring, forceful energy, and many other actions will create a sense of pressure on your animal. A powerful tool in your training arsenal is using pressure to alter their behavior and using the release of pressure to reward their correct behavior.
•Premack Principle: more probable behaviors will reinforce less probable behaviors. Sounds complicated, but you know it well in different language: “If you want dessert, you have to eat your broccoli.” Have your animal on leash, and throw a great treat out of reach. Make him come to you, sit, or perform another behavior that he already knows before you release him to run and get the treat. This not only reinforces the desired behavior, it develops self-control and focus in the face of distraction.
•Select training times: if your animal works mostly for food, do not work him after a big meal. Try to train when you will be most successful, particularly at first. As he progresses, he should be able to work reasonably well regardless.
•Exercise and environmental enrichment: make sure that your animal is getting adequate exercise and is not bored.
•Stop on a good note: try to end your training sessions with success. Work on something he does well and praise a lot.

Behaviors to work on with your animal

Anything you can think of! Sit, down, stay, roll over, shake, beg-up, wave, heel, etc. They are all good exercises that provide opportunities for you to work with your animal and develop him further. But there are a few behaviors that are particularly valuable and that I encourage every owner to practice regularly with their animal if they can be performed safely:
1.Bite inhibition: Never apply excessive pressure with your teeth to my body.
2.Attention: Look into my eyes and wait for a command. Almost all learning starts with attention, so this cannot be overemphasized. Play attention games every day…
3.Hugging: lie calmly and happily while I lie next to you and gently hold you in place.
4.Give: Open your mouth and drop whatever is in it.
5.Crating: relax in a crate for a few hours at a time.
6.Tie-down: relax when tied to something in the house.

Expectations

What you can accomplish is limited somewhat by the animal you are training and your skills as a trainer, but the single biggest factor that will determine how far you take your animal is how much time you spend working and playing with him, so get out there and teach him something every day

I was discussing with a friend what I believe are the primary activities to maximize puppy development, and he asked me ...
23/04/2017

I was discussing with a friend what I believe are the primary activities to maximize puppy development, and he asked me for a list, so…

In my opinion, your goal is NOT to have a perfect puppy; rather, it is to have a perfect dog. The reason I stress this difference is that many people try to achieve adult goals quickly, and unintentionally overshoot the mark as their animal matures. You need to think of your puppy as a sapling: not yet a tree, merely a potential tree. It is your job to nurture, prune, bend, and otherwise create spaces and pressures so that as the puppy grows and develops it will become the best dog it can. For example: let’s imagine that you have a puppy who is playing too enthusiastically, so you discourage play at every opportunity. A year later, this dog begins to mature, and naturally reduces his playfulness by a significant percentage. This natural reduction, coupled with your modification, yields a dog that has NO interest in playing. Instead, you need to look at your puppy’s play drive, and his personality and breed, and make a best guess at where his play drive is likely to be in a few years, and then apply training techniques to increase or reduce that end-point rather than to modify the current behavior.

This article is not about socializing (which I discussed here).

This article is not about teaching “behaviors” to your puppy, although in the first few months I generally teach the basics: name recognition, sit, down, stand, come, stay, wait, spin, twist, speak, rollover, foot, other foot, feet up, feet off, head down, lift, mark, take, hold, give, get, hup, cover, shake, touch, press, sit-up, rise-up, left, right, easy, over, under, on-your-side, back, agility obstacles, etc.

This article is about core skills, attributes, and attitudes that will allow your dog and you to have a great relationship for decades to come. These are the things that, without even really thinking about it, we start doing with every puppy the moment they arrive, and are always surprised when we meet dogs do not seem to have spent time developing.
1.Attention: I spend a huge amount of time rewarding simple eye contact. Teaching my dog to look at my eyes, to look to me for cues, to look to me when distracted, to look to me when nervous. Without attention almost no training is possible.
2.Drive: I spend lots of time building the drives I want, diminishing those I do not, and refining them all to mesh with my preferences.
3.Playing the game: virtually every training session I ever have with my dogs is based on the notion that we are a team working together to achieve a shared objective. My dog needs to understand that I am the leader in our team, but that I am there to help him succeed. That in every transaction, there are paths to success and reward. That if he can figure out what I want, I will give him praise and play and treats and whatever else he enjoys.
4.Response contingency: I want my dogs to understand that they can control their worlds. I set up lots of situations in which they can make choices to be in the wind or not, in the light or not, on the bed or not. I want them to learn that their actions can alter and define their world.
5.Problem solving: almost every day I set up problems for my puppies to solve.
6.Curiosity: I regularly introduce new items, and make sure they are fun or yummy when investigated, so he learns that novel items are worth investigating.
7.Patience/self control: I want my puppy to understand delayed gratification. We do lots of Premack exercises in which I put a reward 10 feet away, but he cannot go get it until he does what I ask.
8.Calmness/thoughtfulness/non-reactiveness in stimulating situations: this is closely related to socialization, but is not identical. I spend lots of times rewarding a thoughtful attitude in a challenging environment.
9.Comfort in restraint: I want my puppy to be comfortable being held down, carried, or otherwise restrained. We play lots of games in which he is held, and gets released and rewarded only when he relaxes.
10.Confidence: I mostly work on this when socializing, but I almost always want my dogs to be confident, so I spend a lot of time rewarding this attitude. It is MORE important to me that my dog be confident than that he has “manners” which I can always train later. So In the first year, I reinforce confidence, even if he is putting his feet up, or chewing on something or doing something that I will ultimately not want…
11.Respect: I want my dog to yield to me spatially, to release things when I ask for them, etc. But training and earning respect in a young puppy must be very subtle or it will erode his self-confidence. If he is extremely self-confident, then you may spend more time on respect, if he is less confident, you may not work on respect much at all…
12.Settling when asked: I want my dog to understand that there will be times when I want him to go lie down. Not play, not get into things, but just go settle. So we work on this for brief periods right from the start.
13.Look where I point.
14.Body awareness: I want my dogs to be aware of their rear feet, their tail, where their bodies are.
15.Connectedness: I want my puppy looking for me as the center of the universe. This requires that, for many months, I be fun and interesting and warrant his focus. It also requires that I give him focus, because if your dog is looking to you for cues and you are not paying attention, he will quickly learn not to look to you.
16.Enjoy a wide variety of foods.
17.Play with me: I want my dog to LOVE to play, so we do it often and joyously, and we end before he gets bored. I particularly work on tug and fetch.
18.Play with other dogs: many people do nothing to teach their dogs “how” to play with other dogs and are then surprised that their dog learns a style that they do not like. I spend a lot of time teaching my dogs what is preferred: lie down with small dogs, do not go harder than a certain threshold, etc.
19.Bite Inhibition (for details on how I train bite inhibition, look here)
20.Body position matters: sit, down, heel, on-your-side, and many other behaviors are built on the notion that the position of a dog’s body matters. So early in life I start instilling the notion that it matters whether the puppy goes under or over something, or on the left or the right, or sits or downs…
21.Relationship of the dog’s position to my body or another object matter. So I play games where it matters whether the puppy is on my left or my right, is looking at me or not, is looking at a particular object, etc.
22.Swimming is fun. (not merely tolerable, but FUN!)
23.Weather tolerance. Wet grass, cold floors, rain, snow, heat, all are fun.
24.Bathing/drying/nail-clipping/toothbrushing/ear-clearing are fun: it is amazing how much more pleasant life is with a dog that genuinely enjoys standing for a bath, so spend a few hours now making it fun and pleasant, and you will thank yourself for years to come!
25.Car rides are fun. (not merely tolerable, but FUN!)
26.Crates are fun, moving crates are fun, loud crates are fun. (not merely tolerable, but FUN!)
27.Cats and other prey animals are not to be injured.
28.Collection: I really want my dogs to be able to be running and quickly collect themselves to turn or jump or transition if necessary.
29.Using your nose to find things: while most dogs are naturally very scent oriented, this skill can be significantly developed in their early months. And the idea can be instilled that they need to use this skill when asked…
30.Objects have names: I do not need my dog to know 500 different items by name, but I want him to understand the concept that a specific word can be associated with a particular toy.

Those are the top things that I work on with a puppy in the first few months. I did not really discuss the details of “how” to work on each of them since that would have made this much, much longer, but if you want specific exercises for any of these, let me know! If you have favorite things you work on that I did not mention, let’s hear them!

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100246

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