Learn how to reduce stress for your dog and keep them under threshold - kzitem.info/news/bejne/t66mmKaHfGqHgI4
@azogal53
2 жыл бұрын
"It's not work, it's fun!" Yes! Change your attitude and you will see how much fun it is! Love the plan you set out, success is sure to follow. 🍪🍪🍪🍪🍪
@nuhalani3928
2 жыл бұрын
I had to laugh when she said that because it WAS sounding like a lot of work 😂 Our frame of mind is critical before we even start training!
@littlesplines
2 жыл бұрын
So great to see advice beyond get higher value food, which is challenging when your dog is refusing cheese, meat and tripe.
@alfiemachelpie
2 жыл бұрын
I got the treat bag out, went out into our yard and ran about like a very happy excited person and Bonnie ate what I offered her after spitting the first few out she went back and found them ate them and wanted more and it was boring dry food she actually came running up wanting more .. totally amazing I'd not tried 2pm before or getting excited myself Thank You! ... out of our yard is next
@nuhalani3928
2 жыл бұрын
I have a reactive dog: she is just so-so about treats outdoors, but she absolutely looooooves playing with toys, so that was my next reinforcer plan. Susan mentioned it very briefly, but I REALLY needed to hear the part about being careful to not use toys outdoors if their arousal level is already high! Thanks, Susan & DogsThat team!
@nanettelai1525
2 жыл бұрын
Love the timing of this - there is a dog that I work with that has a liver shunt so he can't have many high value food treats. I said to his mom that being petted has an incredibly high value for him so that would be a great reinforcer :)
@LoneLupine
10 ай бұрын
I've had 2 dogs, my current dog (german shepherd) is extremely food motivated, he even takes low grade treats outside. My previous dog was food motivated, but it had to be really high value because he was extremely picky... He didn't even like peanut butter or hot dogs! He was an alaskan husky, which are known for fasting because when they're out pulling sleds in the wilderness they don't always get to eat. Then when they get fed they scarf it down. My dog wasn't living the sled dog life so he would randomly stop eating for days. No health issues. He just was not that into food. That being said hr would still do anything for fresh high quality meat. Just not kibble or dog treats. I currently walk my cousind shitzhu mix and i swear that dog hates all treats. But i suspect he has several health and digestion issues, sadly
@donnadigiacomo-kesten1455
2 жыл бұрын
Great podcast. Will have to watch a few times as there’s a lot to digest. I do agree that when the occasional time presents itself during training and my dog decides he will work for the food it’s much easier than training with the toy. I always envy those who have food hounds. Thanks again
@DE-ss5ks
2 жыл бұрын
Another wonderful addition to Recallers! Thanks, Susan! and Tater!
@LittleHikari1
Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video, my puppy training was going really well just with regular kibble out on walks but he has stopped eating on walks, he get easily distracted and isn't interested in the food. I will try these tips going forward
@DogsThat
Жыл бұрын
Awesome, please come back to let us know how your training is going! ❤️🍪
@nancyhooper1742
2 жыл бұрын
Was walking Gemma on 4 mile walk and even a long distance she came back running and didn't have any treats but let her go see by going in the canal for she loves water. Because of Recallers and you this is possible. Can't Thank you enough and love you do sound effects for I do for most things 🤣❤️❤️❤️❤️ Another Great podcast as always 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
@PetfectDogTraining
2 жыл бұрын
Another fantastic podcast. Thank you Susan. My dog only had a problem taking food outside, when he saw another dog head on approach (didn't know then.....but he was over threshold). Doing recallers and counter conditioning from your podcast, he now would eat dust outside, if I gave it to him and he'd think it was great 😂. Thanks for everything.....can't wait for your Doggy Netflix, super excited for it.
@zietray8347
2 жыл бұрын
I have this problem with my English shepherd puppy! Thank you for addressing it!!!
@Angi_Mathochist
2 жыл бұрын
That's all great for most people, but I haven't had the luxury of being able to train with different kinds of treats with my dog. His belly is SO sensitive that if he gets even a nibble of ANYTHING other than his own prescription sensitive-gut kibble, he gets LOUD belly gurgles and rip-roaring diarrhea all the next morning. We train with his own kibble, period. I can put his kibble in a Kong or other toy or puzzle, I can give more pieces of kibble, but I can't give anything but his own kibble. And he wouldn't take food outside, except in the back yard -- even higher-value foods when we were still trying those and hadn't figured out what was causing the diarrhea (answer: pretty much *everything*) -- for the first several months we had him. I knew the issue, of course: he was over threshold. The instant he was out the front door, all his focus was on staring around searching for BUNNIES! Because early on, he did see some. And he is a Greyhound. And he was fresh from the track and this was his first experience of anything away from that environment. Fortunately he a very smart boy and had realized immediately that he couldn't actually CHASE the bunnies while on leash. After the first time, he never tried that again. But he still wanted to SEE them. Of course squirrels would also do. There were only 2 things I could do. 1. work on the loose leash skills at home, inside the house and in the back yard, the only places where he was NOT over threshold. Of course it took a very long time for those to actually transfer to walks outside the front door, though. And 2. Use the environment itself as the reinforcer. You pull, you don't go forward. Tons of turning around or flat stopping and going nowhere because he was pulling or getting way ahead of me or getting in front of me and tripping me up. Eventually, I started to realize that bunnies had finally become "old hat" enough that he was no longer over threshold every time he went out the front door. He will take kibble on walks now, and that makes things much easier. But we've also got used to using the environment, the capacity to go forward at all, as the enforcer on walks, so we still mainly just use that. And it works pretty well.
@stegles
2 жыл бұрын
We will use dehydrated salmon as a super high value treat. Our boy (3.5yo) ONLY gets them for agility training. Even still, hes a nervous dog and thus is completely disinterested in food outside the house until he gets more comfortable. We recently got another BC pup (female, 16 weeks old), who now that he sees her taking treats at puppy class, he is more receptive to taking them at agility and relaxes faster. I call her my wifes emotional support dogs emotional support dog :D In the home, he is completely different treat wise. His level of comfort in a location really dictates weather he will take a treat or not. Trigger wise, when my boy sees me putting ice in my water bottle he goes nuts - He knows we're going to agility. My girl on the other hand, any thing anywhere, shes super social , scared of nothing, really the opposite of him.
@titanbuck7
2 жыл бұрын
This is so thorough. Ty!
@thelastminmom5251
Жыл бұрын
My dog isn’t crazy reactive outside (lucky) but like this video addresses, he hates treats. He doesn’t really care About them at home either. He lives for a “squeaky toy”. One squeak….and his eyes and ears are focused! Lol. It’s much harder, but we’ve figured it out. He’s a 6 month old GSD.
@silverleaf79
Жыл бұрын
I'm very lucky that my papillon is very food motivated, and will work for kibble almost as enthusiastically as he works for cheese or chicken. I swear he was a Labrador in a past life and the only time I've known him to refuse food was immediately after a dog attack that required staples to close a wound, post-anaesthetic, or when he was very sick with colitis. I dehydrate his raw food and break into tiny bits so I can use it all for training, that's pretty high value for him. I mix in tastier foods if we're doing agility training, or going to class, so he has a kind of trail mix. If all he's got is chicken, he gets bored of it pretty quickly so he works better even if you mix in a lower value food. He likes variety. In no particular order, he loves: Any kind of fish, potato (fries especially), chicken, lamb, venison, liver, meat in general, cheese, that smelly dog pate that you can cut into cubes, yogurt, milk or kefir, tomatoes, pasta, rice, coked vegetables, scrambled or boiled eggs (but not raw so much), banana, pear, apple, bread, peanut butter, cream cheese in a tube, Pet Munchies treats. Pretty much any store bought treats, but he doesn't get many of those.
@fallonwertenberger6728
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@heathervenkat1414
2 жыл бұрын
My dog's reinforcements in no particular order: boiled chicken, hard-boiled egg, soft treats, dog kibble, cheese, cat kibble, cat wet food, freeze-dried treats.
@poosahkie1420
2 жыл бұрын
Training Food, 1. Dried Chicken/Turkey/Duck, 2. Milk Bone, 3. Pencil Size rawhide twists - I know, I know!, 4. Cheese, 5. Baked liver, 6.after they come to heel position, -high value is to be released to sniffer/check something out
@i4nc4
9 ай бұрын
I’m still confused. I feed twice a day to allow 8 - 10 hours in between for digestion but does this means you cannot treat train in between meals as it would interrupt the digestion process ?
@007brasso700
2 жыл бұрын
❤️
@emilyyiweitan
3 ай бұрын
My Maltese is not food motivated. He is love and attention motivated.
@solypsomancer9540
2 жыл бұрын
Mine refused food when I tried to start clicker training. Clickers gave her a terror response and she refused treats. Not fear. Terror. After about 4 days I observed the same terror behavior and put two and two together. Cicadas scare the hell out of my indoor dog. Substituting another training sound for the clicker.
@geneball211
Жыл бұрын
Any treat works for Ike, except when he is in a reactive state, nothing works
@DogsThat
Жыл бұрын
Hi, we have a playlist full of help for reactive dogs, here's the link for you: kzitem.info/news/bejne/0ql-sWFji6GDnag&pp=gAQBiAQB
@Audrey_L
2 жыл бұрын
What if you mix his training treats with the kibble? Would that be ok or that training treats be losing value in the reinforcement? I mean, it gets me puppy to eat his food(kibble).
@RaptorsGirl
2 жыл бұрын
I would avoid adding training treats to kibble in order to get your puppy to eat his meals…that is a slippery slope. Adding some kibble to your training treats for training is perfectly good practice for kibble feeders.
@Audrey_L
2 жыл бұрын
@@RaptorsGirl thank you for responding!
@aerynthea
2 жыл бұрын
Does this mean that I cannot bring my 7 months old puppy out for walks until she is taking treats excitedly at the threshold?
@RaptorsGirl
2 жыл бұрын
I guess that depends upon your ultimate goals for your puppy. If you are working towards your puppy eventually focusing on your in all environments and being calm around former triggers, you can take your puppy on walks in less stimulating environments.
@aerynthea
2 жыл бұрын
@@RaptorsGirl Thank you for your reply. I live in the city so everywhere is exciting. That said, I have limited success in doing nose touch (permission) before heading towards an exciting scent or dog. I'm VERY slowly adding nose touch, treat, environmental reinforcement. She remains very distracted when environmental value is too high. Can nose touch become a high value reinforcement?
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