Moving to the teenage section as he will be one very soon 
I had our first Zoom training class online yesterday. It went quite well, and Bear, of course was a little angel and didn't show any of the behaviours I'd been complaining about
. These are my takeaways:
- Stop holding treats in my hand, or have my hand anywhere near my treat bag. (I think this is a throwback to doing a lot of clicker work with Monty, and needing to give the treat within a few seconds of marking.)
- Settle - we worked on this for about half an hour, with Bear tethered to the sofa so he was out of my reach, and with my back to him while I was talking to my trainer, just getting the odd treat. He did exceptionally well on this, so I am now going to build in the distractions which lead to him jumping up and mouthing, such as door knocking, high pitched voices, and ultimately, someone coming into the house.
- We unpicked some of the reasons for his over-the-top excitement, and I fear the ball and frisbee may be at fault here. In just a short time, we've turned this into a bit of an obsession - so he now thinks that every walk, and indeed, every play session, is going to be as exciting as ball chasing. It became clear on the walk I've just had with him, which was meant to be a decompression / sniffy walk - he just doesn't relax when we go outside, and within minutes he's a huffing, pulling stressy dog even when he hasn't had any exertion. I did manage to do a bit of loose lead walking in the last fifteen minutes with him, and bring him down a bit. I'm going to have to break it to my dog walker that the balls are going to have to go, at least temporarily.
At the next session, we are going to have a chat about headcollars, and see if we can minimise the aversion if at all possible.
As well as the settle, I am starting to use the raised beds every day to practice both dogs being calm - while I was tidying the kitchen today, every 30 seconds I was treating for staying there, and every minute or so I would call one of them up for some simple work - touch, sit, lie, etc. Still a long way to go but already Bear has remembered the 'bed' cue and can manage about a minute on there without moving off.
I probably need to build in a few more very short sessions throughout the day - when I'm making a cup of tea for example - so that he gets mini training bursts more frequently. I'm really bad for training the same thing a few times a day to try and improve on it quickly, so I think I need to have some more diverse activities in there too.
I did feel better after the training session - she said it was clear that I had already done a lot with Bear, she could see that from the hour and a half we had on Zoom, and not to feel guilty about not doing lots and lots with them - and it's fine just to allow them to be dogs and do their own thing. And above all, I need to not set myself up to fail - I'm inclined to promise myself the world, underdeliver then get despondent, feel a failure and quit with some aspects of dog training.
So small steps for me as well as Bear.
I'd really welcome and comments or tips from any of you.

I had our first Zoom training class online yesterday. It went quite well, and Bear, of course was a little angel and didn't show any of the behaviours I'd been complaining about

- Stop holding treats in my hand, or have my hand anywhere near my treat bag. (I think this is a throwback to doing a lot of clicker work with Monty, and needing to give the treat within a few seconds of marking.)
- Settle - we worked on this for about half an hour, with Bear tethered to the sofa so he was out of my reach, and with my back to him while I was talking to my trainer, just getting the odd treat. He did exceptionally well on this, so I am now going to build in the distractions which lead to him jumping up and mouthing, such as door knocking, high pitched voices, and ultimately, someone coming into the house.
- We unpicked some of the reasons for his over-the-top excitement, and I fear the ball and frisbee may be at fault here. In just a short time, we've turned this into a bit of an obsession - so he now thinks that every walk, and indeed, every play session, is going to be as exciting as ball chasing. It became clear on the walk I've just had with him, which was meant to be a decompression / sniffy walk - he just doesn't relax when we go outside, and within minutes he's a huffing, pulling stressy dog even when he hasn't had any exertion. I did manage to do a bit of loose lead walking in the last fifteen minutes with him, and bring him down a bit. I'm going to have to break it to my dog walker that the balls are going to have to go, at least temporarily.
At the next session, we are going to have a chat about headcollars, and see if we can minimise the aversion if at all possible.
As well as the settle, I am starting to use the raised beds every day to practice both dogs being calm - while I was tidying the kitchen today, every 30 seconds I was treating for staying there, and every minute or so I would call one of them up for some simple work - touch, sit, lie, etc. Still a long way to go but already Bear has remembered the 'bed' cue and can manage about a minute on there without moving off.
I probably need to build in a few more very short sessions throughout the day - when I'm making a cup of tea for example - so that he gets mini training bursts more frequently. I'm really bad for training the same thing a few times a day to try and improve on it quickly, so I think I need to have some more diverse activities in there too.
I did feel better after the training session - she said it was clear that I had already done a lot with Bear, she could see that from the hour and a half we had on Zoom, and not to feel guilty about not doing lots and lots with them - and it's fine just to allow them to be dogs and do their own thing. And above all, I need to not set myself up to fail - I'm inclined to promise myself the world, underdeliver then get despondent, feel a failure and quit with some aspects of dog training.
So small steps for me as well as Bear.
I'd really welcome and comments or tips from any of you.