Cesar millan v. clicker training

I have 3 dogs here currently, 2 of which are rescues that just could not work out in their former situation. One was on death row when I got the call about him, the sheriff would not allow him back into his state. Long story short version he was sent to a 'trainer' after the last incident (attacking and biting the mail woman) who happened to be out of state since they lived near the border. After the investigation the sheriff ruled the dog had to be put down but had no jurisdiction since the dog was out of state. So the owners agreed to either put him down or rehome him out of state, and after a few contacts they sent me an e-mail and he came to Canada.

Both dogs that I have here that could not be trusted or kept in their former situation were raised with NILIF and they tried clicker or bait training to get further with them. Sorry, it just don't work alone. Dogs need social structure and they need strong leadership. Not to be bullied, not to be abused or beaten, not to be forced to roll over or even yelled at but certainly to be properly dominated. From this they get security and calmness. Both these dogs are happy and enthusiastic farm dogs now that are totally trusted with livestock and human visitors coming and going from my farm.

If your having any success with NILIF or clicker training it's because you have the basics down pat first. Don't get me wrong, I like positive reinforcement and use it lots, but it's not a stand alone. To say it's a full meal deal and tell others it's all they need is as much a disservice to dogs as the oversimplifications I see on Cesar's show. Fergus got himself onto death row due to this, and he is an easy dog to deal with really, IMO. He just needed strong leadership. Yes he is strong willed and needed a bit more than some but I never once 'forced' him onto his back. Not physically anyway, but I have given him the eye and moved into his shoulder till chose to roll. Dangerous? yes, he came up on me once since he had never had any leadership before in his life so this is not something I tell everyone to do, but if you want to rescue a 7 year old dog that has been aggressive at his will all his life, and change his ways into yours you need to think maybe he will challenge you. 7 more years of NILIF is not going to cut it. 7 more years of bait training is only going to reinforce with this dog that IF he wants a treat he can have one by doing some trick. He has a list of tricks that was 2 pages long by e-mail and none of those kept him out of jail.

Add to those 2 dogs the 20 or so I have rescued before them and the 10 years I did training professionally and I'm sure that neither clicker or Cesar or NILIF way is THE right way. Common sense says the dogs are not that simple. I have not watched more than about 6 of Cesar's shows but I have never seen him 'force' anything on a dog, certainly not a roll. I have seen him use it as a relaxation tool, which I thought was interesting, after the dog was down doing massage rather than just letting them rest there which was what I was taught and doing.

Why I can't advise anyone to even try NILIF at all is after talking to the 'trainer' that Fergus went to after the last bite, and got the book the owner was raising him by. Sorry, the premise that they exuded was that you NEVER use any dominance or aggression, not even a leash pop on a dog or else you will get aggression. It is the cause of all aggression I was told. So talking to the trainer he was last sent to, who was well aware of his reason for being there, I asked, but you have aggression in this dog, he has attacked again, after years of nothing but NILIF and bait training what are you going to do different? Nothing he said, the dog needs to come around. There is nothing more to be done, he works for his rewards or he gets put back in his kennel. Yesterday he wanted to chase kids off the school bus walking up the road, he would not work for his reward so I just pulled him back to the kennel and put him away. Now anyone with years of aggression training like Policework or Schutzhund KNOWS that is absolutely the WRONG thing to do. And they kept this dog in a wide nylon collar so that he was "comfortable" and never felt discouraged, or so they called it. Gah! So then they kennel him up so he gets frustrated and pent up and then call me back to move up the shipping date because he is being destructive in his kennel, chewing and pacing, jumping and trying to climb out. Go figure!

ETA what I said to the owner over this is 'if you always do what you have always done you will always get what you have always gotten' If you have used a training method for a while, used it right and given it a good go and it's not working for you, your critter, or your situation MOVE ON! Do not let anyone or group of trainers no matter how convincing they may seem have you keep trying the same thing for SEVEN years. This dog's first aggression incident was before he was 2 and he had never had anything but NILIF. That right there would tell me it's not the right thing for her and this dog. But she was interested in agility and everyone was using NILIF and the club would not allow her to continue if she did not use it and stick with a particular trainer or one he approves of. One that had accredited training in this, which for me makes it seem more of a cult than not.

And no, I don't have a much higher opinion of the horse trainers that do their own single minded thing and accredited training of others.
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yeah....but thats how the dogs work in a real pack...
they DO roll over and submit when being corrected by the alpha dog...
a submissive position is NOT a fear position... theres a BIG difference...
Just my opinion...
i think he does some wonderful work with hard to work with dogs....
 
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Since this is an opinion based thread I will give you mine. I am not a disciple of the Cesar Milan school of dog training. I do however think that many of his techniques are quite useful. In MY OPINION if you see the dogs that I have seen "cower" in fear you are either not watching the same episodes as me or you have little understanding of dog body language.

I have seen many of the dogs he works with relax and become calm when he uses some of his correction methods. I dont see that as cowering. Just my opinion you understand.

What is the roll technique?

very true...i have NEVER seen a dog cower in fear on his show.. never...
I HAVE seen them in submissive positions though... and theres nothng wrong with that..

He VERY rarely uses the roll technique on the shows that i have seen... and only on VERY hard cases...
 
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I like Cesar. I've never seen a dog cower from him - doesn't seem to me like he is bullying them at all. Most of the dogs seem to really like him.

In fact, I wish he'd come over to my house - I've got a few issues with my dog...............
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I like Cesar somewhat... some of his methods are a wee bit in left field and they work for him and thats great... I do however like clicker training as well... I use whistle training with my dogs because we have some thick dense bush and I dont want to be trying to yell for my dogs to come when they are out playing in the back field and the wind is clipping across the soy fields and all you can hear is the wrestling of the trees... 3 quick chirps of the whistle and the trained dogs will come running... (the puppies are still on the leash and in training)
 
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I have a clicker and new pup...
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i should try this clicker training thing...
I dont really know how to do it correctly though... i dont want a confused dog running around in circles when i press the clicker though...lol
 
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I have a clicker and new pup...
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i should try this clicker training thing...
I dont really know how to do it correctly though... i dont want a confused dog running around in circles when i press the clicker though...lol

when I am training.. I do 3 quick sharp blows of the whistle and then call the dogs name, I dont let them get to far off during the initial training like the length of my flexi lead and everytime they come they get a treat..

and then i will extend the distance... till the point that all i have to do is blow and they will come... because they got used to their name being called right after the whistles they just start coming in with the whistles now... and I still give them treats when they come to me... the trainer said i should stop giving treats and start giving praise instead, because what happens if i forget the treats.. I see his point but i never go with out treats... they are in the lining of my jacket for crying out loud and i even have a small container in the coop if i do forget..LOL
 
The clicker is a reward, not a command
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You spend some time charging the clicker by clicking and immediately treating the dog. The eventually learn that the clicker is a GOOD THING, and then you can use it to reward specific behaviors. Timing is crucial.


For example, when teaching the dog in my avatar (Artie) to sit up and beg like a circus bear, I first wiggled a hand before her face and clicked the hot second she lifted a paw the tiniest bit off the ground. Once she got the general direction of what I wanted, we modified the behavior over time. Now if you give her an palm-up signal she pops up into a waving circus-bear pose
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ETA: very clever animals will know that you want some unknown behavior and they will start spontaneously giving you things, hoping to stumble upon the correct thing. This is how we trained the New Guinea Singing dogs at the zoo and it is how most show animals learn their wacky behaviors.
 
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