{the dog blog of Outside magazine}

Posts Tagged ‘puppy training’

If You Teach Your Dog Nothing Else…
by Walker Parks | on October 19th, 2009 | in Features, The Wildrose Way, Training, Video Clips



Capture a Behavior
by Grayson Schaffer | on April 28th, 2009 | in Features, Training
Cooper carrying his steady tab. Good dog!

Cooper carrying his steady tab. Good dog!

Photographers already know this one. If you want to take a picture of wildlife doing something interesting, you’re going to have to wait around and snap the shutter at just the right moment. Capturing your pup’s behavior works the same way: Be ready when your pup does something good, mark the behavior with your bridge, and reward generously. Then wait to see if your pup offers the behavior again and re-reward. Mike uses this one to teach young pups to go to the bathroom on command, but it can be used for any behavior. Best of all, this exercise gives the pup a mind to offer different behaviors to see what brings a reward. A pup that offers behaviors is much easier to train than one that needs to be lured or forced.

Here’s how I started Cooper on sit

  1. I know that if I stand over his puppy pen long enough, he’ll stop standing on his hind legs howling and eventually drop his butt to the ground–maybe for just a second to lick himself before starting to howl again.
  2. At that instant of butt-hit-the-ground, I mark the behavior, praise him, give him a tiny nibble of liver, then offer a couple of pets.
  3. To mark behaviors at this early aquisition stage, I like the clicker because, unlike my voice, it’s sharp, quick, and never changes tone. Once the behavior is learned, I immediately switch to a verbal bridge “good,” which I can project into the field.
  4. The second time I stood over Cooper’s pen and waited, the sit came a little sooner and with a bit more deliberation. I repeat the mark/praise/treat/pet/routine. So there are actually three things going on here:
    1. I’m marking the behavior and teaching him that when his butt hits the ground, he’ll get a reward. For a smart dog, that realization that butt-hit-ground is like a treat lever is mana from heaven.
    2. I’m conditioning the bridge–first the clicker*–then the my voice as a significant sound that means, The reward is coming. Eventually that sound alone will become a reward.
    3. Cooper is learning through association that verbal praise accompanies good things like petting and liver snacks. If we’re going to end up with a dog that works, runs, and plays with us off lead and without an e-collar, this is where it all begins.
    4. You’re teaching him that crying and yelping doesn’t buy him anything, but that sitting calmly does.
  5. Once he’s consistently sitting when you stand over him, you can add the sit cue. Since you already know he’s going to sit.
  6. Now, when we add the slip lede at eight weeks or so, we’ve already got a dog that knows what he’s supposed to do. And if he ignores you, you’re adding pressure from the lede becomes a reminder. You may discover you don’t even need to add pressure.

Using Capturing to Teach Your Pup to Pee on Command

  1. This one is breathtakingly easy. Everytime you take your pup out of his crate after a nap and bring him outside, you know he’s going to pee almost immediately. So just add your cue, Git’er done, as soon as you put him down.
  2. Use this on walks and especially when you’re traveling. Out of the crate at a rest stop, Git’er Done, on your way.

*Mike and his Wildrose trainers don’t use clickers, but go straight to the verbal bridge. They’re also full-time pros with great timing and consistency. Whether you use a clicker on the way to a verbal bridge or just start with your voice isn’t as important as your being consistent and building the bridge as a long-term habit.


A Blank Slate
by Grayson Schaffer | on April 21st, 2009 | in Features
Cooper at six weeks

Cooper at six weeks. He's winking.

Here’s Cooper at six weeks to the day. I flew out to Mississippi to pick him up from Mike at Wildrose. He comes from Hamish and Carol. We’ll be following Cooper’s progress from potty training to his first ski, river, and hunting trips. Already, we’re working on the basics of pretraining: Housebreaking, recall, and capturing and rewarding desirable behaviors he exibits. When is it time to start training? You’re training your pup every time you interact with him, whether you mean to or not. Follow along and we’ll do our best not to lead you astray.