Stop Your Dog's Endless Barking With This Simple Method

puppy Training tips uk Develops your Dog's Hidden Intelligence Click Here 👈 Oh gosh. Okay. If you're struggling with ...

puppy Training tips uk

Develops your Dog's Hidden Intelligence Click Here 👈

Oh gosh. Okay. If you're struggling with excessive barking or you want to learn how to prevent it from happening in the first place, then make sure to watch this video because we have a one-to-one training case study with Peppa who is a German Shepherd and she barks excessively both in the home, out on walks, and also in the car as well. So, we're going to make sure we deep dive into the correct training and structure that every dog needs. And of course, you're going to learn a good few techniques in terms of handling mechanics on how to prevent these things from happening in the first place. If you do enjoy this video, don't forget to hit the subscribe button and turn your notifications on as well. Okay, there we go. Okay. Yeah. So, okay. Okay. Okay. So, yeah. Pure excitement, tunnel vision. Yeah. Just get this lead on me. Let's go. Let's go for a walk. Let's do it. Oh gosh. Okay. Can I just just see quickly if you just um just get some engagement from her? What's she like engaging when she's used to get to Okay. Okay. So, a little bit more environment trumps. Yeah. Okay. Cool. Let's bring her in. I want to go for a reset now then. Uh let's have a little handle as well. So, we'll just help control around the doorway exercise. Essentially, what I'm looking for here is just for her to build up that bit of conditioning. She tries to run out, open the door, door's going to close on her. Yeah. Then, what I'm looking for here is for her to essentially see the doors wide open, not run out. We can start to reward that good behavior. See, just poking her head out. There we go. Oh, where you going? Ideally, just wanted to stand still nice and chill. So, again, this is ideal, right? Where I'm now become a barrier. myself and she's not looking to, you know, just rush past me or anything like that, but she's actually expecting um respecting the authority that we're setting for her. Yeah. What we're going to do now is just invite her out. Yeah. Peppa. Okay. It looks like it's the beginning part of the walk anyway. You know, when she's most excited where we see the most barking. Yeah. So, actually, let's curb that by one reducing the excitement factor by actually she's training even just going just leaving the home. Cool. So, she's quite fixated on you guys at the moment. So, what I'm going to probably do is actually get one of you to handle. Yeah. And just have a little go. Yeah. So, two hands on the lead. Cool. Treats wise, you can have treats. Now, the way you're going to do this, you get treats in your right hand, but you see how she kind of goes forward. So, all you're going to do with that, generally, I'll replace. Generally, I'll replace this hand on the lead with this hand. Yeah. So, this then comes across my body. Now, my right hand is free for treats. The control is still on the same side as Peppa. Yeah. the left arm across your body. Yeah. Just so it's a short but still a slack lead. Um so do you want to have a look little go at the self control and the front door exercise as well? Yeah. Cool. That's it. So once you have that bit of calmness Yeah. You can use your left hand. Yeah. Right hand. Whatever. You can have treats on both sides if you really want to. Yeah. But the whole idea is you can just then just use that bit of a lure. Yeah. And just get a bit of eye contact with you. Okay. Yeah. That' be ideal. Yeah. See the visitor. Yeah. here because if we can see this fixation at the moment, she's got a bit of fixation on the visitor straight away as soon as we open the door. Let's actually break that focus away from the visitor. Yeah. Let's teach her actually focusing on you is a better thing to do. Look. Good. Good girl. Good. Cool. And then we can be Peppa this way. Yeah. And then visitor can come in. Yeah. So, yes. Absolutely. And Okay. And then just get a focus. Just get some eye contact. Peppa. Yeah, good girl. Good girl. And we go Peppa this way. This way. This way. Yeah, good girl. So, the out command very much how that is is let's say for example we have guest or dinner time. Perfect example for it, right? We're about to eat dinner. All I'm going to do here is just say Peppa out. Send her out the room, drop the lead, and she's not allowed to come back into the room until we call her back in. Okay. Yeah. Pretty simple. Mhm. That she tries to come back in. Uh-uh. out. She stays behind the threshold. Absolutely fine. One step forward and I'll be stepping forward. Out. Peppa finish. She doesn't go anywhere. She just But I'm just with the timeout. We don't even have to worry about looking at her. Yeah. So, we can just expect her. Let's just say for example, you've got visitors over. Yeah. We can just expect her to be out there the whole time until we call her back in. So, we've got that. Let's have a look at the place then. Cool. So, there's a couple of options, right? You can go for a sit in a place or a place is the down. Yeah. So we have to do place. Good place. Yeah. Reinforcing that Q word. Good place. Pairing with the marker word as well. Good place. Building a little bit distance. Good place. Um so with the distance as well, I'm just going to start to again just build up a little bit more distance. I do three steps away. Come back. Good place. Right, Peppa. Finish. Good girl. landslide. All right, cool. Let's say for example, you you want to do car journeys and we haven't got that per second person to then be able to train and guide her. Then essentially the only thing we can have a look at is control and management as opposed to training. Right. Okay. Um, so if you're looking at controller management, what I would say with that is probably like a travel crate, a car crate. Yeah. And I know it's awkward. It's a lot of headache, but the way I I see it is if she only gets excited because she sees where she's going, you take out the being able to see where she's going. Settle down. And again, that down position definitely does make a big difference where she's not like, "Oh, where are we? Where are we? Are we there yet? Are we there yet? Yeah, really heightened. So, definitely this would be my go-to. Don't take it. Uh, and she gets rewarded for that period of calmness as well. Um, and yes, I know at the moment you can see still see she's panting. Yeah. But this is like that the whole time in the car. It doesn't matter where you're going. It's a it's a big progress compared to earlier where she was going ballistic. Right. Um, and then kind of going out of the car for a walk as well. Remember you saying when you get out the car, that's when she starts again, right? Yeah. Um, so again, so it's kind of our job to make sure she stays in that down position. So when you do the Okay, as opposed to doing it when you're here where she's got nowhere to go, I just want you to prove the behaviors and you can do it like this. Yeah. And you say, "Okay, good girl." So let's have a look at that le hand mechanics. When I'm teaching Lucy walking, I don't need treats to teach a dog not to pull me on a lead. I'm teaching them boundaries in this sense. How are you finding this so far? This is probably the best she's ever walked. So, definitely I think from what you're telling me as well on the next one, 100% I want to have a look at her walking past dogs when she's on the lead too. That's definitely sounds like it's it's the main focus. So everything that we kind of do in terms of behavior, behavior therapy, you can as a handler, you can apply that to all your future dogs as well to make sure that we prevent all these things from happening in the first place. Peppa, good girl. Yeah. So this is simple reflex name. This is also helping with the loose lead as well, right? So the times I'm calling her name is literally where she's by my side. Yeah. Lucid. So Peppa, good girl. Peppa. Good girl. One thing you can start incorporating when she's off to lead is releasing. Yeah. And releasing. So get her to come back. Make sure she's walking by your side. Do some walking the hill. Rewarding her for that as well. Yeah. And then Okay. Yeah. Go. Go. Sniff. Whatever she wants to do. So I can pass you the lead back. Yeah. Yeah. Let's have a little go. So then you can nice and simple. Call her name. Good. Good girl. When she looks Yeah. Lovely. So you can walk and feed as well if you can do. So that's the whole idea is her walking by herself which gets the reward. So she's building up that association there. Yeah. So before the league goes tense, call her name. Peppa. Good girl. Good girl. Lovely. And reward her. You want some more food? Try and feed one piece at a time as well. Obviously, if it's like if you are using kibble, you got quite a bit of food to go through, you can do a few pieces here and there. But let's just say for for today, we know that her food motivation isn't that high. Giving her a few pieces at a time might make that lower because she's then more full. Just try and keep them on one side of you. Yeah. Can do. Just whichever side you want to walk her on, that's fine. Let's just make sure you're the one who dictates that. So, if I'm walking my dogs and they say, "I want to go get some water." Yeah. Like that's quite clear body language. She was saying, "I want to go get some water." Um, but the way she said it was, "I'm going to pull towards it." Yeah. I'm just going to get up and go towards it. If So, with my dogs, I wouldn't just immediately get up and be like, "Okay, let's go get some water then." Yeah. Because then again, it's the same thing as in what my dogs are doing, whether they're if they're pulling towards it and they're communicating, I want to go get water, I'm like, "Okay, you pulling towards it is then going to get me to follow you to go get it." Right. Down. Down. Settle. So, this is kind of the same thing as what we did in the car. Yeah. Settle. Good. Settle. Reward. Settle. Good. Settle. Reward. Settle. Settle. Good. Settle. So her work ethic in terms of like lying down settling is much better than when we're walking. So again, it's just when she's walking again, she's got all that stimulation of all the smells. I want to go here. I want to go there. Yeah, I think that's because that's what she's done. Down. Good girl, Peppa. Good settle. Yeah. Down. Settle. Good settle. And start to reward as well periodically. Good settle. Yeah. Distractions, i.e. someone's just come through that door. She hasn't moved. Good settle, isn't it? Good settle. Very nice. Yeah, that's it. So, of course, we need to work on league walking, but once you've got that food motivation in there, that's going to help. Yeah. And if we are still needing extra aid, like I said to you before, we can have a look at the figure of eight or a head collar together um if we need to. But definitely I would much rather if we can let's tackle the free motivation part stand on the line. Does she have a bring to you like a bring to you? Yeah. Bring it here. Small toss now. Small toss. Good. Don't even worry about the anticipation. All right. Let's build on this then quickly. So, she's not too fussed about the food. The frisbee's out, right? Backfire. Okay. But that's the thing. Like, I don't mind her having that toy motivation. I think that's fine, but she also just needs to have the control as well. Yeah. In my eyes. Right. You ready? What you got? What you got? What you got? There we go. Drop. Drop. Good job. Yeah. So, definitely I think one thing which is going to make things worse is when a hand is on the toy, if we're actively encouraging that tug, that's probably going to make things worse whilst we're teaching a drop. Cool. And just before the throw as well, let's work on a sit and sit and wait. Yeah. Sit and wait and then throw and then release her. I think every time as well, don't let her chase the thing. Yeah. Let just go retrieve it once it's kind of like a dead toy. Yeah. So, again, if we want to work on that obedience side of things. Yeah. And then just release her. So, okay. Yeah. Lovely. Good. Yeah. So, that's ideally what we want as well. So, if we are standing next to her. So, you're standing next to her. You're both facing the same way. Yeah. Hold the lead during the early stages. Throw the toy. Yeah. And then Okay. Yeah. Just so she's not again anticipating the Lungeon towards the thing that she wants to go get. So, sorry Jine, you come back to her. Stand stand next to her. Stand next to her and face the same way. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. And then you throw the toy. And we don't expect her to leave your side until you've given her the release. And then go. Cool. Excellent. So, you can do that but a little bit further as well now. So be ready as well. Spare hand have some food in it. So just lally boom boom. Yeah. Okay. Drop. It releases. Good. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Get that second second reward in there. Okay. And heal. Make sure she's staying healed. Make sure she's staying healing and focused, Georgina. Yeah. When you've asked her to get that. Make sure you got that solid focus when you want her to. So let's have a look at her. Walking the hill again. You can use a food toy. You can use a toilet or a food lid up to you. Yeah. Yeah. Just make sure you got that solid focus the whole time. The whole time. Good. And then go for the sit when you want to sit. There we go. Wait. You can go for a further throw if you wanted to. You go. Sit. Wait. Go throw as far as you want to now cuz again, now we've kind of got that good control in there. I feel a lot more confident with her going further field. Wait. So sit. Wait. So remember, same thing. Sit. Wait. Let the toy go dead first before you allow her to go. Yeah. So, make sure she waits until that door until that toy drops on the floor and you've given her that release cue. Much better. Much much better. Now, on this retrieve, hopefully this will be a more controlled drop as well. Yeah. You want some food? That's all right. Here you go. Yeah. So you can already see the difference, right, of a non-controlled throw and go get. Yeah. And when she brings it back, it drops so much harder compared to everything's just controlled and she just drops it straight away. Yeah. So she's not over stimulated. She's under control the whole time. She's actually calm, but she's still playing. Yeah. It's a big difference there. Wait. Wait. Perfect. Nice. Go. Bring here then. Bring here. Nice. Thank you. Good. And drop. Drop. Drop it. Drop it. Good. Go. Nicely done. Lovely. Cool. So, that's saying like you're providing her the outlet within that prediction motor pattern of chase, grab. Yeah. Which is retrieving a toy and she brings it back to you and she gets rewarded with food. Yeah. That's a good outlet. She definitely doesn't have to be chasing wildlife as well. Does that sound okay? Yeah, sounds sounds great. Done really well today. What can I put this back on? Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. Go for it. That's okay. No worries at all. Super training session there with Peppa. Wow, what a difference between the start of the session from no control, no obedience towards the end of the session where we were really getting her to demonstrate that good obedience even on that drop line at a distance, showing that control before she went to go retrieve the toy. Really lovely session there. I hope you have enjoyed this video. 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Develops your Dog's Hidden Intelligence Click Here 👈

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