CorvusCorax
Deary me...
I trained the owner by email.
**Looks up at The Point, soaring overhead like a 747**
I trained the owner by email.
There is stress everywhere, but I am the last person I want to cause my dog stress. For example, we have to teach our dogs out of sight stays, which many dogs find stressful, as they are left with about 40 other dogs.....dogs they have never met. It's my job to teach the stays well enough to cause as little stress as poss, but by leaving my dog, that alone causes stress. Hope I've made myself clear.
Also, my dogs are well socialised as pups from 7/8 weeks to accept everything I can get them to meet. But some pups find some things more stressful than others. I own confident, happy dogs, but one of them does not like stays because the dogs next to her could be giving off aggressive vibes. I can't do anything but hope that my dog has been taught well enough to cope with that particular stress.
I quite like the idea of leaving my dog to watch webinars whilst I go up to do the horses, he’s a collie, they are meant to be smart so I’m pretty sure he could learn lots of good stuff. Maybe recall via webinar? Would it be instead of me spending time training him or would there be homework I would have to help him with?
So you trained the owner who then in turn trained the dog.I trained the owner by email.
And to be pedantic you are remotely operating a device that is then training your dog.It does take some equipment but you can use a camera and something like the trick and train device to train the Dog when you are not in the room.https://www.amazon.co.uk/SKYMEE-Cam...coding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=J1SK5433PZR2G3H07MR3
I assume and hope you are joking as electric shock collars as I'm sure you are aware are illegal.Sorry, did you think I was joking?
It's maybe not the best device to have shown but in principle you watch the dog when you get the required behaviour you reward it. Instead of punishing what you don't want.The device is a little contradictory;
It's states it will 'keep your dog calm' and 'let your cute dog chase, stay excited and energetic'.
It also has a motion detector so when the dog moves (due to separation anxiety, cos dogs don't move when there are not anxious?) it throws a that out.
Sorry to derail the thread but what a lot of tosh.
And to be pedantic you are remotely operating a device that is then training your dog.
Anti bark collars are actually positive, positive punishment as they 'give' the dog something. But I do understand what you mean.It's maybe not the best device to have shown but in principle you watch the dog when you get the required behaviour you reward it. Instead of punishing what you don't want.
It's not tosh, it's simply using positive instead of negative reinforcement. Anti bark collars are negative.
People just need to be a bit more open minded. Wouldn't you rather reward the good than punish the bad?
Yes. Anti bark collars are positive punishment as I said in a previous post. However the point I'm making is that is is punishment so it's negative to the dog.Anti bark collars are actually positive, positive punishment as they 'give' the dog something. But I do understand what you mean.
Personally I think if the dog settles and everytime they do they then hear the click and whir of a device that drops a treat it is counterproductive as the dog then get up excited for a treat, so dogs settles-machine excites it, if this happens over and over again the dog is likely to go to a spot, lie down but not settle as it's waiting for the treat.
I personally believe the old fashioned way of actually interacting and training animals is the best, yes, even when teaching them to be left.
Eg. Teach dog to use something to occupy itself in your presence but without your interaction and then grow on that. It's long winded to go into so I won't.
Basically they have to learn to be alone the machine is not teaching that it is trying to teach dogs that machines are just as good as the true company they crave or need, we need to teach the it's ok to be without us not try and replace us with something else.
Wouldn't you rather reward the good than punish the bad?
Exactly why I don't like anti bark collars!Life is tough sometimes, we all have to go through negative experiences and come out the other side. Telling our dogs otherwise is a lie, and letting someone/something else be the source of any negativity can make for insecure, clingy dogs. To me, it's like expecting a teacher at school to parent your child.
'Little Johnny was given lines for being bold, but it was the nasty teacher who gave him lines, not me, I'm lovely'.
This isn't a comment on collars, but judging by some comments, are we at the stage now where a dog has to be shielded from any unpleasant experience?
And when unpleasantness comes from an extraneous source, and we as owners have not taught our dogs to deal with low level stress, is that not the ultimate unfairness? We've sold them a big lie.
It's a big thing now to build resilience in our children, but apparently not in the animals we share our lives and homes with.
I don't understand how someone can say that the last thing they want to do is cause their dog stress and then describe a situation their dog finds stressful, which they deliberately put the dog in.
I have to disagree, you could choose to not enter your dog in those competitions, thus avoiding putting the dog under stress, it is entirely within your controlUnfortunately, despite all Areas requesting the out of sight stays be removed from the exercises required, the KC will not remove them. So I am forced to place my dog in a situation I am not happy with.
I don't know if this is aimed at me but I thought I would try and explain myself better. I do not try and shield an animal from an unpleasant experience. But I do not see the point of using a spray collar if it is just set off by noise. If the dog wearing the collar is with another dog and the other dog barks, the collar dog gets sprayed and this is not teaching them anything, other than a loud noise gets them sprayed. That inconsistency is why I wouldn't want to use them. I do hope this makes sense.
I have to disagree, you could choose to not enter your dog in those competitions, thus avoiding putting the dog under stress, it is entirely within your control
I have no problem with using an antibark on a tough minded dog like this terrier. However, the problem is solved at the moment as it is colder so I can keep my back door shut.Also she is now shut in until we go and let her out, so I don't have to listen to her at 5am.
As for dogs having to deal with stress, of course they have to, they cannot spend their whole life shut away from anything that raises their heart rate.
Now I know very little of obedience, as a competitive thing, but watching a beautiful active dog like a collie creep around at every twitch of the owners finger is no doubt impressive to some, but I would rather watch the same breed round up a flock of sheep the other side of a valley from their owner, confident and empowered in their abilities and doing what they were designed to do. I don't see how obedience can never cause a dog to be stressed. I get stressed watching it!
My dogs are gun dogs and they have to travel on a gun bus crammed in with other dogs and strange people, they aren't madly keen on it but they have absolute faith that they are going to have fun when we get there and that I would never ask them to do something that they couldn't. It is hard, IM untrained opinion, to seperate stress and excitement, both cause panting and tenseness, surely?
That is an off topic ramble - but hey it's my thread!![]()
Or, she isn't confident enough to be away from you, out of sight. Insecurity is generally why dogs break downstays.
I don't know if this is aimed at me but I thought I would try and explain myself better. I do not try and shield an animal from an unpleasant experience. But I do not see the point of using a spray collar if it is just set off by noise. If the dog wearing the collar is with another dog and the other dog barks, the collar dog gets sprayed and this is not teaching them anything, other than a loud noise gets them sprayed. That inconsistency is why I wouldn't want to use them. I do hope this makes sense.
She is confident enough in me. But she is a very sweet, gentle dog who would rather move away from another dog that is giving off bad vibes. In ten years, she has never done this, so has obviously been taught well, and is confident that I will return in a couple of minutes and remove her from the situation. All our dogs do the Sit and Down stay with confidence, but every dog is different. Race is gentle and would rather avoid confrontation....Grouse would be....bring it on, mate, you're in for a surprise. (Neither dog breaks stays through insecurity.)
. It is hard, IM untrained opinion, to seperate stress and excitement, both cause panting and tenseness, surely?
That is an off topic ramble - but hey it's my thread!![]()