Dog training thread

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How do you know she was bored, and how did you respond to it?
Because this is a really common thing for her. She does it any time she has to sit still for long periods. Part of it is boredom, part of it is ok I want to get up and walk to people now. She still behaves and won't get up but just...loudly.

I've tried multiple ways of handling it, one trainer we had told me to just ignore her so she learns nothing comes of her barking. We've tried, but it's hard to do that in public places when she barking. It's hard to simulate situations for it too since she won't do it if we are alone. I've also tried leash corrections and then rewards for being quiet. Doesn't change it. I'll take any tips you have though. It's my most bothersome issue with her as it prevents me from taking her lots of places
 
My suggestion is you don't let it happen. Get her up and walking around before she starts barking. IMO she is getting reinforced for it in some way, she's getting your attention even if it's just you looking at her, frowning, saying NO, snapping the leash, whatever. Don't let it happen so there is no response on your part. Gradually extend the length of time she holds before you move her. How old is she? I think she just can't hold that long without getting restless, so extend the time gradually, then reward and walk her.

You say you feed and water her. Don't. (Is it time to feed her?) That might be part of the problem too. Don't feed her and water her and then expect her to be still with a full belly and bladder. Feed and water afterward, won't hurt her. She can wait.
 
My suggestion is you don't let it happen. Get her up and walking around before she starts barking. IMO she is getting reinforced for it in some way, she's getting your attention even if it's just you looking at her, frowning, saying NO, snapping the leash, whatever. Don't let it happen so there is no response on your part. Gradually extend the length of time she holds before you move her. How old is she? I think she just can't hold that long without getting restless, so extend the time gradually, then reward and walk her.

You say you feed and water her. Don't. (Is it time to feed her?) That might be part of the problem too. Don't feed her and water her and then expect her to be still with a full belly and bladder. Feed and water afterward, won't hurt her. She can wait.
I'll try that, she's 2 years 3 months. She's just a very lazy dog, at home she lays around and sleeps most of the day and is like never restless.

I don't really feed her right before, but she has been fed. Like it's not time for her to eat or be hungry. Same with water. But I will try to limit food/water before we know she'll be still for awhile
 
It has been rainy, i dont mind the rain unless its colder out which it is so we stuck to indoor training. Worked on sits, stays, and then the fun tricks. And lots of different enrichment. I split meals into 3 training first, a enrichment toy second then into their puzzle feeder or bowl for the last bit.
The other night we worked on some retrieving Tucker got over excited quickly, but we worked through it and he did 4 perfect retrieves from 4 different directions. At about 15 ft each. He always comes back towards me but he will stop 3 or 4 ft away instead of right at my feet or behind me. Denver drops it behind me.

I had also took Tucker downtown without realizing there was Halloween decorations out. The one started making noise so he got scared. We sat about 5 ish feet away to the side watching it. At the end he was curious and wanted to sniff it.

The last thing ive been working on is handling Tuckers back paws. He had never had a issue until the incident a few weeks back. Its healed now. Fur is starting to grow. He just doesnt like me touching his paw now. The same thing he did after his happy tail. So we can just work through that again
 
retrieves from 4 different directions. At about 15 ft each. He always comes back towards me but he will stop 3 or 4 ft away instead of right at my feet or behind me. Denver drops it behind me.
Go back to doing retrieves on the 15-foot long line and bring him right to where you want him to deliver. If he tries to sit too soon, back up quickly and keep him moving until you get him where you want him (right in front of you, perhaps?) Praise and let him deliver, then praise again.

You can also go back to kindergarten and do very close retrieves to remiind (and praise!) for retrieves right to your hand.

Remember, when there is a breakdown in performance it's almost always because of one of these 4 reasons:

The dog is

AFRAID
CONFUSED
DISTRACTED or
Thinks he has a CHOICE.
STart by assuming the first and work through all 4 in order till the problem is resolved. Like y'all saw that the seasonal decorations were scary, so you let him work through that at his own pace, that was good!

Next, CONFUSED. Dog is not sure what you want or what he's doing "wrong." Make it easy or simple for him. Be sure you're being consistent. Praise for IMPROVEMENT, don't hold out for perfection or you'll never get it. If you get frustrated, take a break. It's NEVER the dog's fault!

Is the dog DISTRACTED? Work where there are distractions! It's the only way to teach focus!

Finally, dog thinks he has a CHOICE. This is where you use the collar for sharp, snappy, well-timed and convincing corrections. Get the dog's attention. He does NOT have the option to ignore or disobey you, EVER! Not listening to you could cost him his life, or cause a harmful accident to you or someone else. Make SURE he knows that when you speak, he LISTENS. If none of the other methods above have solved the problem, you can safely assume that this is what he needs. You've been fair. You've given him every opportunity to listen. Now make sure he does. Don't "waffle" here. Make sure he gets it.
 

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