Emily_Babbelhund
Mama Red HOT Pepper
- Location
- Regensburg, Germany
My voice disappeared for three days and came back today. What I learned in how this affected Carbon and how we interact on walks was interesting. While my other dogs have been VERY verbally-oriented and only learned hand signals as more of a side-effect, Carbon does not seem to understand language in the slightest, even is own name. I've suspected that my normal constant stream of chatter was doing him no favors. What happened during three days of utter silence?
He paid attention. To. Every. Little. Thing. He obeyed hand signals when requested. I adapted a mouth click as the 'move along' on our walk and he actually listened to it and MOVED ALONG. Because I was ill, our walks were very short and to the point, but he still needed to be ushered through the urban (pretzel) jungle we live in, which means LAT with other dogs, don't touch with food on the ground, simple guiding which street to take and through traffic, etc. To my astonishment, he did as well if not - again - better with very basic hand signals and that mouth click sound than with verbal cues/commands.
Today my voice came back and it felt like Carbon turned back into the pretzel-crazed bottomless pit of hunger and distraction that he is most days. Mmmm...because he knows I'm feeling better and can handle his normal self again, or because I've already started up my chattering at him? It's gotten me thinking again how my training style - very vocal - which worked gangbusters with my Rottie boys is simply not suited to a dog that had very little human contact growing up so just doesn't seem to register the human voice.
I'll try to remember if he's not getting things to step back and go back to silence, or somehow build it into everyday training. Maybe even stop verbal cues altogether, though it's such an ingrained habit with me, I know I'd find going completely silent darn near impossible!
So...how much do you talk to your dog? Do you use hand signals, verbal cues or a mix? What do you think would happen if you stopped using your voice for a day? Want to give it a try?
He paid attention. To. Every. Little. Thing. He obeyed hand signals when requested. I adapted a mouth click as the 'move along' on our walk and he actually listened to it and MOVED ALONG. Because I was ill, our walks were very short and to the point, but he still needed to be ushered through the urban (pretzel) jungle we live in, which means LAT with other dogs, don't touch with food on the ground, simple guiding which street to take and through traffic, etc. To my astonishment, he did as well if not - again - better with very basic hand signals and that mouth click sound than with verbal cues/commands.
Today my voice came back and it felt like Carbon turned back into the pretzel-crazed bottomless pit of hunger and distraction that he is most days. Mmmm...because he knows I'm feeling better and can handle his normal self again, or because I've already started up my chattering at him? It's gotten me thinking again how my training style - very vocal - which worked gangbusters with my Rottie boys is simply not suited to a dog that had very little human contact growing up so just doesn't seem to register the human voice.
I'll try to remember if he's not getting things to step back and go back to silence, or somehow build it into everyday training. Maybe even stop verbal cues altogether, though it's such an ingrained habit with me, I know I'd find going completely silent darn near impossible!
So...how much do you talk to your dog? Do you use hand signals, verbal cues or a mix? What do you think would happen if you stopped using your voice for a day? Want to give it a try?
I'm totally with you there!
This is interesting, got me thinking I must say.