MollyMoomin
Well-Known Member
Tell me it's worth it. *criesharder*
Background; Herman is a 11 month old Weimer (he'll be a year on 13th April) and we've been having 'issues' with his recall. Clicker training has worked wonders off lead when there are no dogs around, so I decided this morning was the time to try on a lunge line on the Chevin - a big forest park near where we live, absolutely covered in dog walkers/riders/runners.... [NB, he is good with other dogs, I swear on my life he wants to play, but a stupid big dog gallopping at you/your dog is rude and intimidating.]
Anyway. Firstly I managed to drop the bloody thing and he took off. Thankfully no other dogs AND he recalled straight away - click treat. 'ooohhhh. We're playing THAT game' he thought, and so he went through his range of tricks that he's been made to do for clicks/treats. So he sat. Then he went down. Then he looked at his bum (we're working up to roll over). Then he sat back up and waved at me. Then offered his paw for a shake. Something we've been teaching him is boxing - that came next and when all that failed, he did cuddles. Which is where he jumps into my arms. For this trick I need to be aware that he's about to do it and actually have asked for it. As I had done neither, he sent the pair of us flying. It rained a LOT here last night.
Never mind, no one saw. (I checked!) So we carried on. Lunge line loose, puppy recalled, puppy came, puppy treated. All good. Treats thrown about for puppy to sniff and generally not found *rubbishgundog*
Practised walking to heel and a few downs. Let him off for 10 minutes (could see on the path quite far ahead, no dogs) and he was really good - although to be fair, I don't think he realised he was off lead. Put him back on for the hilly bit (a bit narrow and at the top is the junction to 3 bridleways and you can't see too far ahead). Told him to run on - as am trying to teach him the commands which allow him to run on and when he has to stay close - and walked off with him. Sadly, I put my foot on the moving lungeline. Yup, ended up on my arse again. Do you think the horrid creature came back to see if I was alright? *cross* So gathered it all up again, got the puppy back, treated him and sent him off again. Called him back, not realising the line was caught up in a HUGE branch. Neither did the puppy till he ran back then got the fright of his life when he realised a tree was chasing him. Puppy RAN. I did not. My bottom is going to be rather bruised tonight.
By this point the lunge line is wet, covered in gravel and heavy. See a horse coming towards us and get him close. He is not concerned by horse in the slightest until the rider started trotting. But he stayed close and didn't bark. Did get a bit tiptoey but didn't jump up either. So pleased with him for that. He has no horse sense at all and as the dogs on my yard aren't the friendliest he doesn't go up that often to get used to them. And mine is not a fan of dogs.
Anyway, he stays on the lunge line, he recalls, he sits, he goes down, he runs about a bit, he is generally a Good Boy.
And do you think we saw any other bloody dogs? Did we hell. I am stiff already!
(I am rubbish at remaining upright though - I am partially deaf in one ear and my balance is appalling. This is why I can't ride either LOL)
If I thought I could be confident of seeing another dog before him, I'd just take him up there off the lead and put him back on if I saw anyone, but chances are, he'd see them before me.
Background; Herman is a 11 month old Weimer (he'll be a year on 13th April) and we've been having 'issues' with his recall. Clicker training has worked wonders off lead when there are no dogs around, so I decided this morning was the time to try on a lunge line on the Chevin - a big forest park near where we live, absolutely covered in dog walkers/riders/runners.... [NB, he is good with other dogs, I swear on my life he wants to play, but a stupid big dog gallopping at you/your dog is rude and intimidating.]
Anyway. Firstly I managed to drop the bloody thing and he took off. Thankfully no other dogs AND he recalled straight away - click treat. 'ooohhhh. We're playing THAT game' he thought, and so he went through his range of tricks that he's been made to do for clicks/treats. So he sat. Then he went down. Then he looked at his bum (we're working up to roll over). Then he sat back up and waved at me. Then offered his paw for a shake. Something we've been teaching him is boxing - that came next and when all that failed, he did cuddles. Which is where he jumps into my arms. For this trick I need to be aware that he's about to do it and actually have asked for it. As I had done neither, he sent the pair of us flying. It rained a LOT here last night.
Never mind, no one saw. (I checked!) So we carried on. Lunge line loose, puppy recalled, puppy came, puppy treated. All good. Treats thrown about for puppy to sniff and generally not found *rubbishgundog*
Practised walking to heel and a few downs. Let him off for 10 minutes (could see on the path quite far ahead, no dogs) and he was really good - although to be fair, I don't think he realised he was off lead. Put him back on for the hilly bit (a bit narrow and at the top is the junction to 3 bridleways and you can't see too far ahead). Told him to run on - as am trying to teach him the commands which allow him to run on and when he has to stay close - and walked off with him. Sadly, I put my foot on the moving lungeline. Yup, ended up on my arse again. Do you think the horrid creature came back to see if I was alright? *cross* So gathered it all up again, got the puppy back, treated him and sent him off again. Called him back, not realising the line was caught up in a HUGE branch. Neither did the puppy till he ran back then got the fright of his life when he realised a tree was chasing him. Puppy RAN. I did not. My bottom is going to be rather bruised tonight.
By this point the lunge line is wet, covered in gravel and heavy. See a horse coming towards us and get him close. He is not concerned by horse in the slightest until the rider started trotting. But he stayed close and didn't bark. Did get a bit tiptoey but didn't jump up either. So pleased with him for that. He has no horse sense at all and as the dogs on my yard aren't the friendliest he doesn't go up that often to get used to them. And mine is not a fan of dogs.
Anyway, he stays on the lunge line, he recalls, he sits, he goes down, he runs about a bit, he is generally a Good Boy.
And do you think we saw any other bloody dogs? Did we hell. I am stiff already!
(I am rubbish at remaining upright though - I am partially deaf in one ear and my balance is appalling. This is why I can't ride either LOL)
If I thought I could be confident of seeing another dog before him, I'd just take him up there off the lead and put him back on if I saw anyone, but chances are, he'd see them before me.