davisn
Well-Known Member
Hi all,
Just had a phone call from a friend of a friend. She got a rescue lab bitch about 2 months ago. she's about a year old, has received very little training & has had at least 3 homes.
Heel/lead work has come on really well. she is very food orientated, to the points of being really rude if she doesn't get a treat when she is expecting one. Her recall is very good (in enclosed field or garden), but she comes back so fast & excited that she heads straight for her owner & ploughs into her or runs past as she can not stop in time. She is very hyper & bouncy when out. Sounds like she is getting quite a bit of exercise, but limited off lead due to her excitability.
Does anyone have any ideas on how to tackle this?
I've suggested using a toy instead of treats as a reward. Training to a whistle to take the voice out of it in case that is adding to the excitement. Teaching her new tricks to exercise her mentally. Go for a 121 session with a good local trainer to get a professional opinion. But I am by no means experienced in training dogs, so I could have it completely wrong!
Just had a phone call from a friend of a friend. She got a rescue lab bitch about 2 months ago. she's about a year old, has received very little training & has had at least 3 homes.
Heel/lead work has come on really well. she is very food orientated, to the points of being really rude if she doesn't get a treat when she is expecting one. Her recall is very good (in enclosed field or garden), but she comes back so fast & excited that she heads straight for her owner & ploughs into her or runs past as she can not stop in time. She is very hyper & bouncy when out. Sounds like she is getting quite a bit of exercise, but limited off lead due to her excitability.
Does anyone have any ideas on how to tackle this?
I've suggested using a toy instead of treats as a reward. Training to a whistle to take the voice out of it in case that is adding to the excitement. Teaching her new tricks to exercise her mentally. Go for a 121 session with a good local trainer to get a professional opinion. But I am by no means experienced in training dogs, so I could have it completely wrong!