dog training terminology

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dog training terminology

A dog or puppy absolutely thrives on consistency. This is true all the way to find and stick to the kibble right to decide what is and what is not acceptable behavior. Consistency makes a puppy very much happier and safer than the inflatable type of life many of us humans prefer.

Maybe you'll have to have family councils periodic hammer JUST OUT What kind of dog behavior and are not acceptable for various clan members. By all means get it directly from the members of the human family, otherwise if you are unpredictable and pull in all directions different, the puppy will end with a confused mess, and it is your fault. Once you've decided what happens, enforce the rules. "Oh, let the do just this once "is a sure way to fail the training program and to confuse the puppy.

Your puppy is likely you have either not vocabulary or very limited. Determine your words of command and to the whole family to use that word. This is not productive when people are talkative, nagging and persistent their puppies with the vocabulary of adult man, wondering why the poor, stupid puppies do not seem to get the message. My husband Charles and I had a discussion some years ago on the terms we used to encourage a puppy to eliminate outside. It was I think understandably, somewhat shut down standing around to tell us a great Dane puppy to go to the potty. "I find the term convenient and easy to understand for a puppy. However, as I agree with him then and still do, use any word that is easy to understand – meaning short – and comfortable, as is the terminology that you always use for this particular behavior. With Tiger, that we were breaking at the time, Charles has achieved remarkable results, saying first "make a puddle," and saying "go shit. "After all, these are the words she understood.

Over there is another word mat is used over the years with puppies: smooth. From slow and said the word sounds like the behavior that we encourage. When a puppy is playing too roughly, for example, a soothing hand accompanied by the repetition of the "gentle" command will serve to calm the situation. The puppy is not something inherently wrong when you want the "soft" command – there is simply too large or too vigorously. Thus, the curious puppy who is a cat nose residents are warned to be gentle. I want the puppy and cat to get along – insist on it, in fact – this is not a time for NO.

Obviously, the old dog that knows "Gentle" understand what it hurts if it gets too rough with a puppy. The dog who greets someone is too rambunctiously bridled down, so to speak, with the "Sweet! warning. If you think the" NO "like a red light," sweet "is amber, or a warning light. A very useful command, I found.

About the Author:

Jane Saeman loves dogs and strives to keep other dog lovers informed.
A whole world awaits other dog lovers.
Find out how cute the dog in your life is at my website which is at http://www.PicturesOfMyDogs.com

Article Source: ArticlesBase.comUsing Vocabulary That Your Puppy Can Understand

Great Dane (Dog Training)


Bad Words? It's important to use language that respects every living being.(EDITOR'S NOTE): An article from: Whole Dog Journal


Bad Words? It’s important to use language that respects every living being.(EDITOR’S NOTE): An article from: Whole Dog Journal


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This digital document is an article from Whole Dog Journal, published by Belvoir Media Group, LLC on July 1, 2011. The length of the article is 530 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.Citation DetailsTitle: Bad Words? It’s important to use la…

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