Friday, December 11th, 2009 at
4:42 pm
Max is a 2 year old Rottweiler

Max
Max was adopted about 2 month ago by family with two dogs.
Max went through training with his previous owners and now his new parents have brought him to refresh his training. We have been practicing all of the obedience commands including “Give it”.
The Give command
- The dog should forfeit whatever it has to its owner or handler.
To teach this command:
a)

The Give Command step a)
Give the dog a toy.
b)

The Give Command step b)
After the dog has taken the toy in his mouth, show him a food treat or favorite toy in your left hand.
c)

The Give Command step c)
Place your left hand under the item in the dog’s mouth.
Say “Give” – to get the treat the dog has to release the toy.
d)

The Give Command step d)
Take the item the dog had in its mouth and give it the treat, or favorite toy, saying “Good, Max, give”
Repeat this exercise with different items until the dog understands that “give” means
release the item into your waiting hand.
Thursday, December 3rd, 2009 at
11:46 am
Wolfie is a 10 month terrier mix

Wolfie
Wolfie is a friendly, gentle Doggie. He was adopted by a very nice young couple about six weeks ago. Wolfie and his new parents are a perfect match. For the last three weeks Wolfie has been coming regularly for *obedience training. It’s very easy to train him because he is cooperative and responsive. He has learnt almost all commands so now he and his parents are starting prepare for the AKC CGC test.

Wolfie Training
It’s very important how you give a command for a dog.
Attract your dog attention by speaking its name, and then give your command with hand signals.
Speak in a deep tone of voice – except for the come command when you should use a high –pitched voice.
Avoid repeating a command – it will confuse your dog.
Use your body language:
- Welcoming-smile, use a friendly and exiting tone of voice, open your arms to receive the dog.
- Stern – Look angry and use a deep tone of voice

Wolfie with Dad
Monday, November 30th, 2009 at
4:00 pm
Hand signals are very important tools you can use to train your dog.
Dogs aren’t verbal creatures – even though they can learn how respond to your words. For them it’s easy to see movement – so they can readily perceive the movement involved in a hand signal. Give the hand signal immediately followed by the verbal command.
The Stay Signal is one of the commands you can easily learn and teach your dog.

Hand signal - Stay command 1
Hand signal – Stay command 1 – Dog on your side
If your dog is beside or behind you, drop your arm and hand to your side, fingers down, with the palm of your hand directly in front of the dog’s nose.

Hand signal - Stay command 2
Hand signal – Stay command 2 – Dog(s) in front of you.
If you are facing your dog, point your fingers upward with your palm at an angle that’s easy for your dog to see.
When you teach hand signals to a dog try to keep them large and precise.