Cooperative care 101

HAH

Moderator
Location
Devon, UK
I’ve been very slowly working on cooperative care with Kipper, using Deb Jones’ book ‘Cooperative Care: Seven Steps to Stress-Free Husbandry’ as a guide. I thought I’d log our progress in case anyone was interested. My main reasons for working on this with Kipper are:
  • I want to reduce stress where possible, and he’s currently not keen on all types of handling - especially mouth inspection and toenail trimming;
  • I think it’ll build our relationship and my ability to read him;
  • I think we’ll enjoy it!
Session 1
So the first step is place conditioning: that is, building huge value in just being in the training place. This is a place you decide beforehand, and needs to be stable, high enough for you to comfortably work on nails etc., and accessible for the dog to get onto. I’m using a fold-up bed covered by a blanket :) (excuse the tip of our spare room!):
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For building value in ‘the place’ your dog doesn’t need to do anything. You’re simply making this a great place to be, so he’s in the best emotional state possible when you’re working there. Value is built using a ‘cheese bowl’, which is really any heavy bowl (I’ve used a jug you can see in the photo) that you smear on the inside with a very thin layer of something delicious like fish paste or pate. Show your dog the bowl, invite him to the training place, and when in place let him lick the bowl clean. When it’s done invite him to leave the training place while you refill the bowl, and repeat 3/4 times per session. That’s it! By the end of our first session (3 refills) Kipper was happily leaping onto the training place for a refill! The second reward is delivered with liquid food (like baby food) in a syringe, but I don’t have one yet so will do that in our next session. The main issue for now is using up the pate before it goes out of date in 2 days!
 

HAH

Moderator
Location
Devon, UK
What's the reason for liquid treats?
I wondered this and am not really sure. My dramatic mind thinks if they need to not move their head/neck (or can’t? Maybe with a cone on, or are muzzled?) then they’re very used to this reward delivery. But it may become clearer...
 
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I wondered this and am not really sure. My dramatic mind thinks if they need to not move their head/neck (or can’t? Maybe with a cone on, or are muzzled?) then they’re very used to this reward delivery. But it may become clearer...
In Deb’s CC course, she gives lots of different options for treats, and different situations. When I did it, I reinforced the table just with regular treats (kibble): ten treats on, lure off and one treat off, wait for dog to jump back on (or lure if necessary the first couple of times), until the dog can’t wait to get on the table.

Throughout the course, I found different food delivery worked best for different scenarios. Using the Treat & Train worked best for Willow on the table, but a cheese bowl worked best when I had to give Squidge injections. Working with a variety of options means you can choose what works best for a certain situation.

I’m revisiting my cooperative care protocols recently and playing with some different ideas in the last couple of weeks, trying to get our communication a bit stronger.
It’s such a valuable thing to do; it teaches you so much about your dog and how they talk to you :)
 

HAH

Moderator
Location
Devon, UK
Revisiting this thread just to say that I need to pay into this a lot more over the coming weeks.
Kipper has had an eye infection that we had a gel for last week - he was relatively comfortable with me squidging it across his eye on my thumb, but it hasn’t quite shifted so we’ve got drops with a steroid 3x a day, and he’s less keen on this. So far (day 2) he’s being an absolute Trojan, but I can see his trust reducing daily which is quietly heartbreaking so after this is done I’m going to be paying heavily into gentle cooperative care for eye handling.
 

Candy

Biscuit Tin Guardian
Oh! I do so understand about the quietly heartbreaking bit. I was at this stage when Joy was refusing antibiotics and hid under the bed for four hours back in January and I felt dreadful about it. Fortunately in that case Sardeens Saved the Day. Hope you and Kipper can reach an acceptable agreement soon.
 
Ugh poor Kipper boy, it is horrid when you have to do this for them.
I think you've done really well with it Harriet, something I always mean to do with Cassie but never seem to get round to.
She has her annual booster/vet check coming up so maybe now would be a good time to start.
 
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