My 5 month old little guy is just now starting to ignore commands that he’s been great at for a couple of months. Frustrating! This video showed up just when I needed it. Thank you
@jaydingiesler52802 ай бұрын
We have a 7 month old puppy so this was a great heads up. I try to keep up with everything we’ve learned by playing training games during the day. I’ve found that the 15 minuets of thinking is great for getting him through a regular work day. Now I’m hoping it also helps to stave off some regression. Kale, while I didn’t do your programs, your influence did help guide me to picking an excellent trainer in our area. I thank you for sharing your example freely so new dog parents can see what to look for. Appreciate you and your work so much 😊❤
@scottjones66242 ай бұрын
Terrific distinctions!
@carissalizotte89772 ай бұрын
Very helpful content!
@Nakira20002 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. This information is very helpful 💕
@joyfulk9services2 ай бұрын
I loooove your little pep talk sessions! As a trainer, it really helps me to better communicate with my own clients in a more understanding, confident, and articulate way. One little discrepancy I slightly disagree with, "if dogs knew it, they would do it." I don't necessarily think that's true, they can know it very well, and due to being opportunists by nature, so if there are any competing motivators, it makes total sense they'd not do it 😂 I think you sort of meant that though too lol PS: I have several clients that did many of your programs especially the puppy ones! ❤ Always nice when they have a good foundation whenever starting out! Especially for behavioural modification! So thank you for all the work you guys do! ❤
@lizehhh2 ай бұрын
I think "if dogs knew it, they would do it" holds true in the cases you mean as well. Knowing how to a do a sit stay in your kitchen with no one around is not the same as knowing how to do a sit stay on a side walk with a bike riding by, which is not the same as knowing how to do a sit stay on a forest trail with bird sounds all around. Embracing the "if they knew it, they would do it"-mentality and keeping in mind how bad dogs are at generalizing, has really helped me be empathetic towards my dog when she's failing to perform a command and instead look towards my (lack of) training to explain and then learn from our failures.
@PatriciaMarie1002 ай бұрын
Great advice
@donnalordly1615Ай бұрын
Do you do any training with Yorkshire puppies or just larger breeds?
@nvs5142 ай бұрын
My 17 month old boy started guarding me and space, he even lunged at my partner. So we have had to dial everything back, put in more management, not reward coming into our space, work on place and crate and calmness all over again. My partner is so sad because he loves dogs but he can barely be around our dog right now, its juat not safe. I am working so hard and consistenrly though, he's a good boy, we will get him back on track but definetely nipping it in the bud.
@McCannDogs2 ай бұрын
Dog training setbacks can be incredibly frustrating, but you’re not alone! Regression is a normal part of the training journey, and there are practical steps you can take to get back on track. We recently created a video that explains why these setbacks happen and how to overcome them: kzbin.info/www/bejne/iJy9fIqiZtOifpo. I think you’ll find it helpful! Let us know if you have any questions after watching-happy training!
@gu55892 ай бұрын
Teach him “leave it” command also you need to show him that you are the boss and what you say goes. There’s no lunging at others without your permission. And to your partner he need to spend some quality time with your dog so they can bond. He can teach him new tricks, play with him, take him on walks etc
@willseely45152 ай бұрын
I notice there's a difference between a crate dog and a dog in a 15 x 20 outdoor cage. Absence makes the heart grow fonder. A dog is more affectionate when waking up and this is the best time to leash it. I keep a 4 foot leash on indoors till 1 year and fully trained. I don't start strict training until 8 months. Puppy satiation play is more important till 8 months IMHO.
@carlasenecal34342 ай бұрын
My eighteen month old guy lost all of the things he was doing so well. He is improving a little at a time. There is a rabbit living close and he is absolutely very a lost cause if he sees the rabbit. We can't let him off leash and expect that he will come when called. I think he wouldn't stop running. I am super anxious about this.
@Bittamin2 ай бұрын
Sounds like you already know what to do! Don’t provide opportunities to just run away.🎉 you might feel bad in the moment for holding your pup back from doing certain things, but the possibilities and horrors that could occur if you were careless would live with you forever 😬 wouldn’t want that!
@carlasenecal34342 ай бұрын
@Bittamin thank for the extra boost of confidence 🙏
@Pi2.7182 ай бұрын
I am with you 😅❤
@mat131742 ай бұрын
Our almost 3 year old mini golden doodle has always had issues chewing on carpet. She had started to get a bit better, but seems to have regressed some over the past six months. She won’t do it in front of us, but when she is left (we can be upstairs working and she is downstairs), she escapes the part of the house she has free access to, into the room with the area rug and then proceeds to chew it. Any tips? We walk her at around noon each day, and let her run around in the yard as well so. We still leave her in the crate when we leave the house.
@angelinacamacho85752 ай бұрын
maybe try a lick mat and see if she thinks that is more rewarding than the carpet.