It's a boy!! (Welcome ODIN)

Beanwood

Administrator
I recognise I’m very particular - they talk about teaching loose lead walking by simply not moving forward until the dog learns to stop pulling, which (these days!) isn’t for me.
Totally get this... :heart: I don't use this technique either when teaching, and I seem to attract mostly gundog breeds these days. It is a training method that really is too much for adolescent dogs/puppies, unless they are already used to problem solving - ie: can deal with threshold frustration by working through it and have handlers that can read their dog like a book.
 
Totally get this... :heart: I don't use this technique either when teaching, and I seem to attract mostly gundog breeds these days. It is a training method that really is too much for adolescent dogs/puppies, unless they are already used to problem solving - ie: can deal with threshold frustration by working through it and have handlers that can read their dog like a book.
Yes I've never understood the logic of this technique either
 
Today we did a little parcours over a stick, a ladder and a square where they had to sit on. One or two paws was enough. Loose lead. Nose to the grond when walking the parcours. A come game with wistle. The trainer held odin, I had to walk away and call him, voice or wistle was okay. A ball game with two little balls. One was thrown away a little distance. When he had the ball, call him and show the other ball and throw that one in opposit direction. That was today. He loved it.
 

Candy

Biscuit Tin Guardian
Today we did a little parcours over a stick, a ladder and a square where they had to sit on. One or two paws was enough. Loose lead. Nose to the grond when walking the parcours. A come game with wistle. The trainer held odin, I had to walk away and call him, voice or wistle was okay. A ball game with two little balls. One was thrown away a little distance. When he had the ball, call him and show the other ball and throw that one in opposit direction. That was today. He loved it.
We did something similar to this with Joy when she was very young, it was great fun and she clearly enjoyed it. When it came to the 'Come ' game though, the trainer was holding her collar, while I walked away before calling her and she simply slipped her collar and came running back to me before I'd had a chance to call her! As the trainer remarked, somewhat drily, 'Doesn't look like you're going to have any problems with recall then.'
She's always been a Goodgirl! :heart:
 
Meanwhile, when we played this game at puppy training, when the trainer let go, Snowie took off at high speed to play with other dogs! (It was a huge park that allowed dogs off lead.) Suffice to say, I was useless at teaching recall, I really had no idea. Poor Snowie, if only I knew then what I know now.
 
Meanwhile, when we played this game at puppy training, when the trainer let go, Snowie took off at high speed to play with other dogs! (It was a huge park that allowed dogs off lead.) Suffice to say, I was useless at teaching recall, I really had no idea. Poor Snowie, if only I knew then what I know now.
I had a German Shorthaired Pointer pup and many of the litter met up, 'let them off' the trainer said ' they are puppies and will stay with you' with that we let them off and like Snowie, they all dispersed off into the distance :ROFLMAO:
 
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