20 likes | 42 Views
To learn not to touch your dog, you need calm rewards and a lot of patience. One of the greatest gourmets in history, champion of gluttony in the category gobbling a half-baguette sandwich in 2 fangs (also holding the pizza stuffing speed record that has been lying around in the gutter for 3 days) shows you how she learned step to touch in 6 steps. You can tell your dog something else: don't touch, don't touch, you leave or leave. Choose and you will always say the same thing.
E N D
Learn Not To Touch Your Dog To learn not to touch your dog, you need calm rewards and a lot of patience. One of the greatest gourmets in history, champion of gluttony in the category gobbling a half-baguette sandwich in 2 fangs (also holding the pizza stuffing speed record that has been lying around in the gutter for 3 days) shows you how she learned step to touch in 6 steps. You can tell your dog something else: don't touch, don't touch, you leave or leave. Choose and you will always say the same thing. With the no touch command, you prevent your dog from eating anything and becoming intoxicated. You can also use it for other things, for example cats or dogs, even if it is more efficient to use different orders for what is consumed and for living beings. This is a very important order; do not hesitate to spend time on it! Step 1 Hold out your closed hand with a treat in it (not too tempting). Your dog sniffs your hand (normal…). When he pulls his snout back, say "no touch." Immediately reward with another treat. Repeat until your dog understands: you can reach out with a closed hand with a treat in it and say "no touch" and your dog won't put his muzzle forward anymore. If that's too difficult, start with objects or toys. 2nd step Sitting dog put the treat on the ground, not too close to him and preferably next to him, not in front of him. Make a gesture (you will always do the same) to accompany the order not to touch. Say "don't touch". Don't wait too long to reward. At first, a second is enough. Reward with a treat other than the one placed near your dog. Increase the difficulty by placing the treat a little closer to your dog by saying "no touch". Rehearse quietly and in different places. Learning not to touch your dog to prevent him from taking things outside requires rigorous training at home. Now you can see here for the best Dog Car Seat Cover at Family Pooch. Step 3
Verbalize your agreement. By saying "you can eat", you can sometimes reward your dog by allowing him to eat after a successful "no touch". When your dog eats after waiting, say "you can eat". Proceed as at the beginning, when you say "no touch" while your dog pulls his muzzle back when you reach out with a clenched fist. Only go to this step when your dog makes nice “no touches” for at least 2 seconds. You can take advantage of him grabbing the treat after a while of waiting, or you can also point it out and say, "You can eat." Take your time. Repeat as many times as needed. Step 4 Toss the treat either far or near your dog whichever is easier for him. If the dog is sitting facing you and you throw behind him, it's easier than throwing while he's looking in the direction the treat is going to go. Consider rewarding by alternating with "you can eat" and another treat (better than the one you threw). Step 5 Hold out the treat in the palm of your hand to your dog (ideally sitting then lying down) saying "no touch" before extending your hand. Don't get too close and don't wait too long before rewarding. Optionally, you can learn to refuse food by adding an additional difficulty: holding out the treat, but this time holding it with your fingertips. It's difficult. It takes a lot of rehearsing. Do not put your hand too close to your dog. You have to gradually approach closer and closer. Thanks to this work, you can learn not to touch your dog and when someone wants to feed him, he does not take it (useful if one of your relatives gives anything to your dog or, for another example, in the childcare framework). Step 6 Practice in easy conditions, dog sitting down, and food on the ground next to it not too close, to practice with increasing temptations. Repeat the steps with food that is little by little more tempting: dog sitting and treat placed closer and closer, dog lying down, treat thrown, treat in the palm of the hand, treat between the fingers... Important Only when "no touch" works very well at home can you practice outside. Wait until you have obtained satisfactory results in the critical contexts for your dog (poop? food? trash?) to start decreasing the reward (one time out of two, three times, etc.) but remember that the dog loves to eat and that some are extremely stimulated by anything that is eaten (even if it is disgusting to us) so sometimes we need to continue to reward certain dogs, in certain contexts. It's not up to your dog to keep up with you. It's up to you to introduce a new stage when he has successfully completed the current stage. Don't upgrade to a higher difficulty level until you get good results with an easier stage. Manage your dog's daily environment. You should not attempt it unnecessarily. Avoid creating a craving for food (or poo …). Never get upset. Your dog does not make the same difference as you between droppings, the trash, your food, treats at 1 or 15 €… Never say "you can eat" with your food if you are also working with what you eat.