Monday, April 18, 2011

An Overview of Weaving for Agility, Obedience and Trick Training


In agility, Weaving entails negotiating a ‘slalom’ series of weave poles.  In obedience training, weaving through your legs can be a great way to add sparkle to your heelwork practice; is excellent for strengthening back muscles or warming your dog up to work; or is even just a really neat trick to impress friends and family.  (You know your dog loves applause!).

Training your dog to walk at heel can be pretty intense and tiring for you and your dog.  Enlivening your practice with ‘surprises’ can help keep your dog alert and focused on you and avoid it becoming a chore for both of you. 

       

You can start by luring your dog through your legs with a treat or their favorite toy, “marking” performance with a positive “Yes”, “Good” or clicker.  Gradually reduce (‘fade’) the lure until your dog performance on your voice cue only.  Remember to work on both the left and the right, putting them together (like a figure of eight) when your dog is confident.  Just do a few repetitions to keep the game really fresh and enjoyable! 

In agility, the dog must enter from the right (left shoulder to the first pole).  The goal is fast, independent weaving, where your dog knows their job and looks for the correct entrance, continuing to the end without too much intervention from you!  Several methods have evolved over the years.



The key point is to make learning easier – just training the entrance, ordoing fewer poles - finishing quicker so your dog gets rewarded sooner.  Slowly raise the bar.   More detailed guides ‘How to Train your Dog to Weave’, are available free from our Resources page on www.dogangels.us   You are sure to find examples on the Internet, including handlers ‘home videos’ of training.  Good luck and Happy Training!   With special thanks to Kimma, a Finnish Spitz, and her owner Katie for demonstrating. 



    

Sunday, January 30, 2011

12 Basic Principles for Training Your Dog or Puppy

1. Be consistent in your commands and "house-rules."

2. Be vigilant as to what behavior you are actually rewarding. It may not be what you think!

3. Keep training simple, positive, and short. Aim to "quit while you are ahead."

4. Be clear about what you want to train and train one aspect at a time.

5. Break exercises into easy steps, You can put things together later (chaining).

6. Promptly reward (reinforce) the right behavior with a clear, well-timed marker of reward.

7. Build very gradually, using small steps towards the desired end result (shaping).

8. Start without the command (cue); once your dog repeats the behavior reliably, add the cue.

9. Use special treats, a fuss or a toy – but know what your dog values!

10. If you are not in the right mood, postpone training.

11. Young animals have short attention spans, so don’t ask puppies to do too much - a couple of repetitions only.

12. Time out’s can be valuable and help to absorb learning. A stressed dog cannot learn. Be aware of your dog’s emotions.

Recommended Books:
Don’t Shoot the Dog by Karen Pryor 
How Dogs Learn by Mary Burch and Jon Bailey
Culture Clash by Jean Donaldson