Tuesday, December 29, 2009

At home stuff

It never fails. People are always shocked at their dogs' behavior in public. "But they never do that at home." In training class, its the most fun, "But they do it at home no problems." My girls are no different. What they do willingly and/or eagerly at home doesn't always translate to what they'll do in public. But since its bitter cold out today, with a freezing wind, we tested/trained only at home.

Just like when we go to training class, they know what one on one training means. Everyone else gets crated, clicker comes out, maybe treats are pulled out of the cabinet, these are all signs that we're about to work!

I'm going to use The Levels Training for the purpose of getting them through the basics and the foundation for everything else. There's also a neat website that takes you step by step for testing and training each level and marking how they did. Yes, I'm doing that too. I figure the more I put into it, the better we'll work together.

Kali

  • Come  - was easy for her. She anticipated early on what was going to happen next! (We worked on this last due to needing to use treats.)
  • Down - I started with the down with no treats or clicker around. Easy for her!
  • Sit - same thing, no treats, no clicker yet.
  • Target - she does a nose touch and a target stick touch no problems! 
  • Zen - to me, zen is the same as "leave it". Again, she has no problems with this.
  • Handling - another no-brainer, she loves getting attention.
  • Watch - her watch is intense!
  What still needs work...
  • Come from 40' away. This was laziness on my part, I didn't want to move another area of the house.
  • Distance - (going around a pole) We haven't worked on this at all yet.
  • Stays - I'm not too concerned at the moment with 'stay' at home. In class, she does them fine. Just another example of dogs not generalizing well...
  • Stand 


 Tina

  • Come - she anticipated my call but ran back slowly to my partner.
  • Down - I think I need to clean up the cue for this, she seemed uncertain at one point what I wanted.
  • Sit - easy 
  • Target - she does love targeting, Tina's all about nose action
  • Zen  - if by zen you mean 'omg, totally avoid object and move away from it' she's got this one down pat!
  • Handling - this is Tina we're talking about, she's a lovebug!
  • Stay - the absolute best stay out of all my girls!
  • Watch - this took a long time to get her to accept, Tina never liked eye contact, but now, she's got it!!
  What still needs work...
  • Come - from 40' away, I was lazy, we established that...
  • Distance - she still needs to just learn this one.
  • Stand


Astra 

  • Come - We got down on our knees to encourage her to come closer to us. She did very well.
  • Down - Might have gone better had I stayed on my knees. I'll remember that for next time. She downs, just not from her original place.. she only wants to do a 'front' down.
  • Sit - easy
  • Target - she loves this also! More so now that I've got a neat target stick to use.
  • Zen - easy!
  • Watch - she'll stare holes into you if you let her!
  What needs work...
  • Come - from 40' away.. (me lazy, remember?)
  • Distance
  • Stays  - she saw no reason whatsoever to not follow me... 
  • Handling - I've been working on this since she was a puppy. But its hard to convince a 5lb papillon that big hands reaching out to her are okay.
  • Stand


Brianna

  • Come - she couldn't have moved any faster for this
  • Down - without using treats, she was still throwing herself to the ground by the end of this test.
  • Sit  
  • Target - target = touch. Brianna loves the touch game. It's a great way to refocus her during class.
  • Zen - this always requires a leave it cue for her.
  • Handling - "yes, touch me please"
  • Watch - She's even learned to move her body to maintain eye contact.

  What still needs work...

  • Come - from 40' away (are you really surprised at this point?)
  • Distance
  • Stay  - stay in public vs stay at home are two different things for her...
  • Stand

I didn't bother doing any of the leash exercises. Cause really, how often do you stand around your house with your dog on leash and they don't behave???

We have started over training "go to mat". I found two oversized thin kitchen towels to use. I grabbed about 15 treats and clicked for any interaction with the towel. By the last treat, each of them was laying down with at least their front paws on the 'mat'. That's a pretty good start I think. Eventually, they're going to work up to laying down 2 to a towel... For now though, practice is still one on one.

I would say they ARE crate trained yet not. For times like this, training time, they all go eagerly into their crates and wait patiently for their turn. For feeding times, same scenario. I want to work more on 'get in crate - mom leaves room - girls remain calm'

Overall, not bad I'd say.

No comments:

Post a Comment

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...