The towel in a crate reminds me of a (now) funny story of a patient. One of the vets had to do foreign body surgery on the dog because he had a history of eating random things. Because the owners were going away, the vets actually made arrangements for him to be boarded at the local 24 hour hospital. When he went over there, he ate 3 towels in the kennel and they had to open him up again there...
@dogsrgodsspelledbackwards33403 жыл бұрын
Awesome Susan. Full stop. Just plain awesome. That’s it. You’re awesome. I love your videos. This Q & A was a nice opportunity for viewers to ask anything,, and get some really good help.
@suzannehauser58503 жыл бұрын
That last question's answer cracked me up. I waited the whole podcast to hear it!! So simple....and here I was worried I was doing something wrong. Love you Susan...you are so helpful!
@TeeyaMareeya3 жыл бұрын
Some great tips here, thanks so much :) I could listen to your podcasts all day, they are my absolute favourite. I love your passion and your way of explaining things, you do it in such a way where you educate, but don't patronize. It feels like having a conversation with a friend :) Thanks for being a friend through lockdown :)
@pubculture3 жыл бұрын
All that and a great sense of humor. Thank you again ❤️
@kathleencollins8843 жыл бұрын
I’ve been doing a lot of reflecting of my 30+ years of having dogs. I trained them with the knowledge I had at the time. I went into the military after high school. I got two dogs when I got my own house. I was militant about how they were trained, when they were train and where they were trained. Everything was very predictable and super scheduled. After ten years in the military I went into the education and psychology field. I taught a self-contained class of students with severe behavior problems. In college I learned about behavior modification and used that with my students and later with my dogs. The dogs that I had in later years were looking to me for guidance while my previous dogs looked to avoid being punished. I had a saying I used while teaching, “Better praised than punished better punished than ignored.” Punishment is reinforcing. I taught the kids to act out to get my attention. I had to come up with better ways for the kids to get their needs met. When I moved to Florida in 1999, I started working for my certification in behavior analysis. Positive reinforcement and behaviors shaping changed the way I trained my dogs. I got much better and quicker results with dogs who were calmer in all places and not just in front of me. I recently got a new puppy. I’m training her with the games I learned from your videos. I can’t get enough of these videos. I’m loving playing the games with my new puppy, Shy, and Shy can’t wait for “DogTime.” Thank you for your insight and humorous teaching style.
@jodieklum34643 жыл бұрын
I’d love to hear more about no excited greetings and separation anxiety. I have a 12 week old puppy who LOVES everyone. The only time she pulls on leash is when she sees people she wants to greet.
@ionicamermaid11413 жыл бұрын
Just wanted to say thank you for all the content you are putting out there and that I am amazed how much you motivated me! Got to know you through KZbin this year and started homeschool the dogs because I wasn't sure if recallers was worth spending "so much money" but now that I have it I know it's worth every penny! And I might even renew it next year as there is so much breathtakingly awesome content! I am really grateful to have found you, your content and not to forget your team that is doing a brilliant job! My dogs and I have improved in less than two weeks more than in the last several months! Can't wait to see more progress 😃😃😃
@sarahr45383 жыл бұрын
About not teaching "watch me" - You mention that you use "target" for competitive dog obedience. Can you elaborate on how you do that please? Watching the video clip, I see your hand across your tummy, where we are supposed to have it. Do you have the dog target that hand while standing? You aren't luring are you, having a treat in that pocket, correct? Your reasons why not to target, or potentials issues that could come up, are brilliant. Thank you!
@AnnainAwe3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for using my inquiry for #2 🤗
@heathergallilee61613 жыл бұрын
My Q- Do you recommend or use supplements for your dogs that may help them with anxiety or worries? I have to look back to review the podcast you did about what you feed your dogs - that may give me some info.
@TeeyaMareeya3 жыл бұрын
Would you be able to touch on moments of communication? I'm sorry if this doesn't make sense, but I've heard you can not reinforce fear by giving affection, however in other circumstances you can reinforce an undesirable behaviour by communicating with your dog at the wrong times. Would you possibly be able to touch on the differences? I hope this made sense lol
@nancyhooper17423 жыл бұрын
Great podcast as always and I always end with Break then do something different and leave room or area❤️❤️❤️❤️⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
@azogal533 жыл бұрын
Thanks Susan. Lots to think about as I think I need help rewarding more appropriately (way too easy to just chuck cookies). Will watch again!🍪🍪🍪🍪🍪
@amandazayonce50153 жыл бұрын
Another great podcast Susan :-) I have a question about dog food. I'm not exactly sure why you're vegan, but if it has anything to do with animal welfare (which I imagine is for sure part of it) what do you feed your dogs and where do you get your raw dog food from? I myself follow a plant based diet for animal welfare reasons (along with many others) and am struggling with feeding my dogs an optimal diet for their health (they are on raw food now) that is also both sustainable and compassionate. Can dogs eat just a vegetarian diet and be healthy? I've seen companies in Vancouver working with vets creating meals and saying yes they can, but I'm not sure. Any help in this matter would be greatly appreciated. Keep up the great work and thank you kindly.
@katherinecollmer10943 жыл бұрын
Hi, good podcast. I was wondering, though, about growing the love for toys like you’ve grown the love for food. I’d like to hear more about that aspect. Win will do almost anything for food but toys are “meh” for him. I’d like to transfer some value to them so that I don’t always have to have food on me in order to play with him or have him offer behaviors when we are not at home. Any suggestions? As, always, thank you so much for sharing you expertise with us!
@DogsThat3 жыл бұрын
Katherine, revisit the foundations of "Growing the Tug Value". This would be an excellent question to ask in Recallers, so we can help you one on one.
@dove20212 жыл бұрын
How do you keep your dogs from biting your hands when playing tug? My lab gets so excited and tends to re-grip the tug toy and occasionally will get my hand. I can tell she isn’t intentionally because she immediately loosens and moves away from my hand but it’s happening more than I feel it should and occasionally even though she immediately moves off my hand, it still hurts.
@DogsThat2 жыл бұрын
Hi Sheela, there are tips to help in this video for puppy biting (applies to pups of all ages) - kzbin.info/www/bejne/fp6uhqltpbaMh7c
@paulanourse53463 жыл бұрын
Hey what do you feed if you don’t feed kibble? I feed raw and I have a hard time finding good treats to use for training.
@DogsThat3 жыл бұрын
Hi Paula, here's a video to help: kzbin.info/www/bejne/rpvMkoKvlM6Kr9k
@sutamaagusdogtrainer3 жыл бұрын
Good morning ma'am, today I ask, there is a dog that is 1 year old, trained to use food, does not want to use toys, does not want to, what should we do
@DogsThat3 жыл бұрын
Hi @sutamaagus_ dogtrainer the episode on "Premack, Dog Training and Transfer of Value" is a good one to watch to help: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jZa3l4BsfJJqd6M
@ldavis-henry50653 жыл бұрын
I kind of understand your explanation of why you don’t do the “watch me”. I have watched all of your podcasts several times and have been training my dogs for over 10 yrs following some other great trainers on utube, and some classes. So not a newbie. But I still don’t understand something you said on another podcast. That you want the dog to be focused and looking at distraction ie food on floor and not at you. Then you say their name, dog looks at you and then you release. I have played what you refer to as it’s your choice for yrs, every day in many situations. My dog looks at me if I throw food or toys etc on ground, until I release him. I am struggling with now asking him to look at distraction just so I can then say his name to redirect and Release. What am I missing here?
@JennyYasi3 жыл бұрын
It took me a while to understand this, but there are two parts I understand. One is, when a dog is working we need the dog to focus on the work (whether that's the next agility obstacle, or the scent trail the dog is tracking). So the dog is learning to be responsive to the handler even when the dog is focused on work. And two is, if the dog is focused on a distraction, he sees a squirrel or chipmunk, we want him to be able to respond to us even when he's looking at something exciting.
@DogsThat3 жыл бұрын
Hi @L Davis - Henry the video about "How to Train Your Dog to Leave It with No Command" has some helpful foundations: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fXitnJmogs-YaM0
@ldavis-henry50653 жыл бұрын
Thanks. I have watched the video several times but still it doesn’t click for me. I have a dog who will look at distraction of food or cat etc. then he will look at me as if to say “ I am being a good boy and not giving in to this temptation. So what I am hearing Susan say is that this is not good enough. She wants the dog to stare at distraction and only come off it when she says their name, dog looks at her, she rewards. Dog looks back at distraction and she releases. I don’t know how to get my dog to go back and stare at distraction. Maybe I need a cue like say “focus”? I get it that if he was man trailing or other sports you would want the dog to focus ahead. But for food, cat, squirrel etc.? and I do some kind of IYC every day inside and on our walks - for yrs with all my dogs
@JennyYasi3 жыл бұрын
@@ldavis-henry5065 So these are games YOU set up, the dog didn't set these games up, to prepare your dog for every day challenges. So, my dog has become accustomed to associating something valuable with me, knowing that I reward self control around valuable things. These games grow, so later in the Recallers' program, there are more advanced levels of its yer choice, where you release the dog to the item you asked him to stare at and then you change your mind, and cue a wait, and sit down stand. This becomes conditioned strongly enough so that if my dog is staring at a chipmunk, or if I throw a ball, I can cue him to go sniff it or get it, and change my mind and cue him to come when called. In your training sessions, the idea is to condition the dog so that he is listening and ready to respond to your cues even if he is staring at a cat. Saying a word (like focus) doesn't influence behavior, it's the placement of the reinforcement that influences behavior, and the cue is simply an association that helps the dog understand when the reinforcement is available. So the IYC game are all scenarios that you set up and practiced so your dog will be conditioned, when he sees something interested, to be expecting a valuable cue from you. It sounds to me like your dog is cueing you, and finding things to look at and then asking you for reinforcement? In that situation, you don't need the dog to stare at the trigger (unless you are teaching the dog to alert you to something), as you are getting exactly the behavior you want.
@JennyYasi3 жыл бұрын
You haven't had a hole chewed in your pocket? You think that's the IYC game that teaches that, or the not-leaving-pants-with-food-in-pocket-dumped-on-floor?
@RaptorsGirl3 жыл бұрын
Um, you are implying I tidy :) #NotSoMuch #WellTrainedDogs #IYCForTheWin