PDA

View Full Version : leash walking


carol maxwell
10-26-2012, 09:57 PM
Is there anyone in The Villages that would like to train
a seven month old lab to walk on a leash? She pulls me
all over the place and I just can't seem to get her to walk
for me. I am willing to pay.

CFrance
10-26-2012, 11:02 PM
Is there anyone in The Villages that would like to train
a seven month old lab to walk on a leash? She pulls me
all over the place and I just can't seem to get her to walk
for me. I am willing to pay.

Carol, there was a leash training two-day session at the Lifelong Learning College that took place outside at one of the rec centers. I tried to find it in their online catalog, but I can't seem to come up with it. The first session was without dogs, the second with dogs. You might call the LLC to see if it's still available. Also, their new catalog is coming out soon, so look for it appearing online. They may repeat the class.

My experience with leash training a 6-month-old golden was... the instructor said, Oh, well, he's young yet... ! But that was in MI.

My other experience in hiring a trainer, with our first golden, was that when we got the dog back, yeah, he was trained, but we still had to work with him and become the "boss." that's the hardest part. He will be trained, but they're pretty darn smart. They know you're not the person who trained him. It's like a fourth grader's mindset when they walk into school and see they have a sub for the day. Whooo hoo!

Our current golden is using a Gentle Leader. It works like a charm, but everyone we meet thinks it's a muzzle. I actually don't care, because the dog's stronger than I am, and I need control.

Barefoot
10-27-2012, 12:22 AM
Is there anyone in The Villages that would like to train a seven month old lab to walk on a leash? She pulls me all over the place and I just can't seem to get her to walk for me. I am willing to pay.

Carol, I've sent you a PM. I think we can help. No charge.

redwitch
10-27-2012, 05:31 AM
Definitely get the Gentle Leader. Best lead I've seen for a dog, especially a young, rambunctious one.

ajbrown
10-27-2012, 08:14 AM
Is there anyone in The Villages that would like to train
a seven month old lab to walk on a leash? She pulls me
all over the place and I just can't seem to get her to walk
for me. I am willing to pay.


To Carol: Good luck. In my experience (as the trainee, not the trainer), the dogs do not get the training :D. After you get some training, confidence and patience with a capitol 'P' will be your keys.

To Barefoot: Very nice gesture :mademyday:

Patty55
10-27-2012, 08:30 AM
Mine is 12 and still pulling, I figure she'll outgrow it any day now.

CFrance
10-27-2012, 08:40 AM
Carol, I've sent you a PM. I think we can help. No charge.

Barefoot, send me a PM too! We're still using the Gentle Leader after 5 years and two obedience classes avec leash training! I'd love to get rid of it as people think it's a muzzle ("Why are you muzzling a golden retriever?!"). But he's strong enough to pull me across the road if he sees a rabbit/deer/kitty/bird/piece of fluff...

Barefoot
10-27-2012, 01:38 PM
Barefoot, send me a PM too! We're still using the Gentle Leader after 5 years and two obedience classes avec leash training! I'd love to get rid of it as people think it's a muzzle ("Why are you muzzling a golden retriever?!"). But he's strong enough to pull me across the road if he sees a rabbit/deer/kitty/bird/piece of fluff...

For sure, we will meet up with you when we get to TV in November. We'd be happy to help if we can. I'm not a professional dog trainer, but I've had 11 dogs, 2 cats and 2 horses. I love working with animals. It helps that Fireboy is very strong, he is a retired firefighter. We don't believe in punishment, just consistency and firmness. Training should occur when the dog is very young, but you can teach an old dog new tricks. A few years ago, we adopted a mature 70 pound rescue with "issues". The people we got her from said she couldn't be trained. It took no time at all for us to train her. She just didn't understand what they wanted her to do, they were giving her conflicting signals.

In the meantime, the number one rule of dog training is that your dog needs to respect you as leader of the pack. Especially a large dog. Even if he is the only one in the pack! Some dogs just automatically respect their human as the dominant tribe member, some have to be taught. Let me ask you a couple of questions. Do you make sure you always feed yourself before you feed your pet? The pack leader always eats first. Do you make sure your dog sits and waits while you go out the door first? The pack leader is always given that courtesy by pack members.

With small dogs, if you're lucky, you can get away with spoiling them and babying them. But with large dogs, it's all about respect. I believe in rewarding positive behaviour rather than punishment, but with firmness and especially consistency.

LittleDog
10-27-2012, 01:47 PM
As an aside there is a golden here who goes for a walk with her master. She is not on a leash but carries the lease in her mouth and walks right in front of her owner. What a neat dog!!!!

John

CFrance
10-27-2012, 02:31 PM
For sure, we will meet up with you when we get to TV in November. We'd be happy to help if we can. I'm not a professional dog trainer, but I've had 11 dogs, 2 cats and 2 horses. I love working with animals. It helps that Fireboy is very strong, he is a retired firefighter. We don't believe in punishment, just consistency and firmness. Training should occur when the dog is very young, but you can teach an old dog new tricks. A few years ago, we adopted a mature 70 pound rescue with "issues". The people we got her from said she couldn't be trained. It took no time at all for us to train her. She just didn't understand what they wanted her to do, they were giving her conflicting signals.

In the meantime, the number one rule of dog training is that your dog needs to respect you as leader of the pack. Especially a large dog. Even if he is the only one in the pack! Some dogs just automatically respect their human as the dominant tribe member, some have to be taught. Let me ask you a couple of questions. Do you make sure you always feed yourself before you feed your pet? The pack leader always eats first. Do you make sure your dog sits and waits while you go out the door first? The pack leader is always given that courtesy by pack members.

With small dogs, if you're lucky, you can get away with spoiling them and babying them. But with large dogs, it's all about respect. I believe in rewarding positive behaviour rather than punishment, but with firmness and especially consistency.

Thanks, Bare. We didn't/ haven't had an obedience or pack-leader issue with either of our goldens. They would sit/down/come/stay/leave it just fine, and recognize us as the ones in command. I fed them first because I choose to, and this one doesn't beg while we're at dinner--just sits quietly in the room.

I just haven't been able to get the heeling training down pat. I'm sure it's laziness on my part. That's why I thought this refresher course from Lifelong Learning College would be helpful. If it's offered again next semester, I may take it--unless you have taught us how to leash train!

Oh, and I disagree with you about spoiling small dogs. An untrained dog, period, no matter what the size, is a pain in the butt!

Patty55
10-27-2012, 03:02 PM
A little OT, has anyone seen the Goldens being trained for the Guide Dog Foundation, they are so damn cute. I heard there are something like 12 of them here in TV.

CFrance
10-27-2012, 03:04 PM
Are they puppies? If they're puppies, I need to go find them!

Patty55
10-27-2012, 03:19 PM
Are they puppies? If they're puppies, I need to go find them!

I'd say they are now maybe 5 or 6 months old, we saw them at the dog park when they were very young. It was comical, all the small dogs were in the big dog part, I still went to the small dog part. They were in there and VERY ACTIVE. After just a few minutes my dog was like SAVE ME.

The people fostering them said the Guide Dog Foundation brought down 12 in a van, they stay here for a year learning the basics, then they go back. I don't think I could give them back.

bkcunningham1
10-27-2012, 03:47 PM
May I please ask a serious question about being the pack leader? I understand this, Barefoot, and believe it with all of my being. But, how does a dog respect you as a pack leader when you have to follow behind their BMs and pick up their poo? Excuse me for sounding so crude, but it has weighed on my mind since I've lived here and constantly see people walking around picking up after their dogs and carrying the "you know what" with them.

Barefoot
10-27-2012, 04:58 PM
The people fostering them said the Guide Dog Foundation brought down 12 in a van, they stay here for a year learning the basics, then they go back. I don't think I could give them back.
I really, really admire people who foster dogs, or take them for training. I've contemplated it, but I know that if I had a puppy for a year, there is no way in the world I could bear to part with it. I'd be a felon because I'd take the dog and flee across the border to Canada.



May I please ask a serious question about being the pack leader? I understand this, Barefoot, and believe it with all of my being. But, how does a dog respect you as a pack leader when you have to follow behind their BMs and pick up their poo?
The dogs have an intelligence equivalent to a two-year old child, or perhaps if it's a aussie, a three-year old child. So I don't think they give a lot of thought to what people put in the bag they carry around. Or maybe I underestimate dogs. Maybe inside they're laughing their ass off.

Patty55
10-27-2012, 05:10 PM
I really, really admire people who foster dogs, or take them for training. I've contemplated it, but I know that if I had a puppy for a year, there is no way in the world I could bear to part with it. I'd be a felon because I'd take the dog and flee across the border to Canada.



I would just say "Oops, it ran away", then I'd move.

Patty55
10-27-2012, 05:11 PM
May I please ask a serious question about being the pack leader? I understand this, Barefoot, and believe it with all of my being. But, how does a dog respect you as a pack leader when you have to follow behind their BMs and pick up their poo? Excuse me for sounding so crude, but it has weighed on my mind since I've lived here and constantly see people walking around picking up after their dogs and carrying the "you know what" with them.

I posted this on another thread that got shut down, a friend of mine bought her dog a backpack so he can carry his own poop.

CFrance
10-27-2012, 06:43 PM
[QUOTE=bkcunningham1;573279]May I please ask a serious question about being the pack leader? I understand this, Barefoot, and believe it with all of my being. But, how does a dog respect you as a pack leader when you have to follow behind their BMs and pick up their poo? Excuse me for sounding so crude, but it has weighed on my mind since I've lived here and constantly see people walking around picking up after their dogs and carrying the "you knw what" with them.[/QUOTE

BK, I think you are ascribing the mind of a human to a dog. I don't think they even notice that you're following them around picking up after them. They don't even understand the concept of defecating and who's responsible for cleaning it up.

What they're looking for is clear direction from you as the pack leader to remind them what's acceptable and what's not, in terms of their actions, not yours. And to trust that you will always do that. So you let them do this, and you don't let them do that, consistently, and that's what makes you the pack leader. They don't have a clue what you're doing or what it means when you pick up their poop, the same way they don't look at you as their servant when you put their meals down for them.

shcisamax
10-27-2012, 07:47 PM
Gentle Leader. I have a dog that actually had me hydroplaning. The Gentle Leader changes everything. It is not at all painful to the dog but they cannot move any further than the length of the leash. Go get it today.

CFrance
10-27-2012, 07:55 PM
Gentle Leader. I have a dog that actually had me hydroplaning. The Gentle Leader changes everything. It is not at all painful to the dog but they cannot move any further than the length of the leash. Go get it today.

My vet talked us into a gentle leader with our current golden. Maybe because our last golden pulled so much despite training. I love the gentle leader, but I would like to train the dog out of it. It is to the point that it's merely a psychological thing with him now. If it's on, he doesn't pull. If it's off, he eventually pulls. It's not even tight on him anymore.

But it does get a lot of strange looks and negative comments from people not familiar with it. I shouldn't care, but I get tired of explaining it to people who are brazen (rude?) enough to comment.

bkcunningham1
10-27-2012, 08:05 PM
[QUOTE=bkcunningham1;573279]May I please ask a serious question about being the pack leader? I understand this, Barefoot, and believe it with all of my being. But, how does a dog respect you as a pack leader when you have to follow behind their BMs and pick up their poo? Excuse me for sounding so crude, but it has weighed on my mind since I've lived here and constantly see people walking around picking up after their dogs and carrying the "you knw what" with them.[/QUOTE

BK, I think you are ascribing the mind of a human to a dog. I don't think they even notice that you're following them around picking up after them. They don't even understand the concept of defecating and who's responsible for cleaning it up.

What they're looking for is clear direction from you as the pack leader to remind them what's acceptable and what's not, in terms of their actions, not yours. And to trust that you will always do that. So you let them do this, and you don't let them do that, consistently, and that's what makes you the pack leader. They don't have a clue what you're doing or what it means when you pick up their poop, the same way they don't look at you as their servant when you put their meals down for them.

You gave me something to think about with your comments. Thank you. I can't get past that dogs mark their territory though. So, they must have some appreciation of their, um, shall we say, actions.

I do apologize for helping to derail this thread. But some of the best discussions are sidetracked thoughts, IMHO. I personally think Barefoot may be onto something though. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SKm5xQyD2vE&feature=related Peace.

CFrance
10-27-2012, 08:19 PM
[quote=CFrance;573333]

You gave me something to think about with your comments. Thank you. I can't get past that dogs mark their territory though. So, they must have some appreciation of their, um, shall we say, actions.

I do apologize for helping to derail this thread. But some of the best discussions are sidetracked thoughts, IMHO. I personally think Barefoot may be onto something though. Muttley laugh - YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SKm5xQyD2vE&feature=related) Peace.

That may be true, but the territorial marking has nothing to do with your picking up their poop vis-a-vis being their pack leader. The marking is instinctive. Our dog doesn't know what the heck I'm doing when I pick up his poop. He doesn't see it as me being beneath him in the chain of command. He doesn't even know what that action is all about.

You do certain things for the dog because he can't do them himself and/or needs them to survive--feeding, getting their vacs, walking for exercising. The pack leading thing has to do with him recognizing what is expected of him in general.

bkcunningham1
10-27-2012, 08:26 PM
Just put it this way, CFrance. If you weren't acting appropriately and you allowed your dog to be your pack leader, you can bet he isn't going to be picking up after you. Now who has who trained? LOL jk

CFrance
10-27-2012, 08:32 PM
Just put it this way, CFrance. If you weren't acting appropriately and you allowed your dog to be your pack leader, you can bet he isn't going to be picking up after you. Now who has who trained? LOL jk

Well, I don't think it's my dog that has be trained to pick up his poop. He could care less! It's society that's trained me to do that. When we were kids, there were fewer dogs and nobody picked up after them. Then the population grew, the pet population grew, and poop on the ground became more of a problem. So ordinances were enacted. Then I got trained, but by the community, not by the furry friend ;-D

cpcrofton
10-27-2012, 09:04 PM
I'm not a dog trainer but have worked with several while training my Westies. I would be happy to work with you and your pup! I recommend having a training collar, the linkage type and plenty of meat treats, like cut up hot dogs! Contact me via email cpcrofton@comcast.net if you're interested.

lovsthosebigdogs
10-28-2012, 08:22 AM
Have you tried a Gentle Leader collar? I know that labs are big and strong and also that Gentle Leaders look like muzzles but they are not. They are a tool for you to gain control of a dog that wants to go her/his own way when you walk. The idea is that where the head goes, the body will follow. The collar comes with instructions and maybe even a video (Not sure about that). Dogs are usually not thrilled with it at first but once they get used to wearing it it's not a problem for them and it makes it much easier for you to control them. My brother in law was complaining that his 1 year old mostly pit bull mix was dragging him all over and pulling his arm out of the socket. I visited him and brought the GL collar with me. After less than 5 minutes his dog was walking perfectly next to me. He didn't like the look of it and refused to use it so his dog is still dragging him down the street. The collar goes over the dogs muzzle with a strap but the dogs get used to it pretty quickly if you stick with it. Good luck. You can get them onliine or at PetSmart.

lovsthosebigdogs
10-28-2012, 08:35 AM
Boy, do I feel stupid. Somehow I came to this original post from a different place and didn't see the other posters comments when I suggested the Gentle Leader. Like it was an original idea, LOL. Shoulda known that all my smart friends from TOTV would have gotten there before me. Oops.
Anyway, in all my years of dog training and therapy dogs I did have one dog that never quite figured out that I was Alpha. He was respectful about 95% of the time but he always thought we were equals. He was extremely smart, walked appropriately on lead MOST of the time, but if he thought he needed to go see something he'd pull me. This rarely happened because he was very well trained but it did happen on occassion and when a Great Pyrenees has an idea you don't share, believe me you know about it. And because it only happened, oh, maybe once a year it always took me off guard. So, the question is, Was that dog really leash trained?

CFrance
10-28-2012, 10:10 AM
Have you tried a Gentle Leader collar? I know that labs are big and strong and also that Gentle Leaders look like muzzles but they are not. They are a tool for you to gain control of a dog that wants to go her/his own way when you walk. The idea is that where the head goes, the body will follow. The collar comes with instructions and maybe even a video (Not sure about that). Dogs are usually not thrilled with it at first but once they get used to wearing it it's not a problem for them and it makes it much easier for you to control them. My brother in law was complaining that his 1 year old mostly pit bull mix was dragging him all over and pulling his arm out of the socket. I visited him and brought the GL collar with me. After less than 5 minutes his dog was walking perfectly next to me. He didn't like the look of it and refused to use it so his dog is still dragging him down the street. The collar goes over the dogs muzzle with a strap but the dogs get used to it pretty quickly if you stick with it. Good luck. You can get them onliine or at PetSmart.

You can get them much cheaper on ebay than in the stores. All the guys in our family were dead set against the gentle leader, and I was the only one using it on our golden. Finally my husband tried it and was amazed at how much easier it was to walk the dog. Then our son (football tackle) was visiting and wanted to take the dog out for a walk. I "made" him take the leader along. He had switched to it within two city blocks.

The only problem is rude people asking you why your golden is wearing a muzzle. It's really nobody's business, but I get tired of explaining.

Oh, and the initial trick with training the dog to the leader is KEEP MOVING!!! In the beginning, as soon as you stop walking to talk to someone, the dog will drop to the ground and start trying to wriggle the thing off of his snout. This only lasts a couple weeks. Much better to keep him moving. I ignored the instructions to have him wear it around the house, because he just kept trying to paw it off of himself.

Good luck!

Barefoot
10-28-2012, 10:39 AM
And because it only happened, oh, maybe once a year it always took me off guard. So, the question is, Was that dog really leash trained?

I don't think dogs (or people) are ever 100% anything, including leash trained. We all go off the deep end occasionally. :mornincoffee:

I have a small dog, 12 years old. He is very well trained and polite. He is a Therapy Dog and has visited many hospitals and clinics. However he goes bannanas when the neighborhood squirrel hangs on our birdcage to tease him.

ActsOfKindness
11-24-2012, 01:20 AM
hey darlin you are giving up way too easily there. my beautiful sheltie ..died 2 years ago ..she was 19. i forgot what it was like to have a puppy in my life..God bless my son..he got me another sheltie okay? i have no fenced yard and it was summer when i got her.it was a nitemare. i m not going to lie here. but eventually she started walking. if you dont get her going between you and her....you will have other 'problems' that arise..with power plays. what good is it if someone else walks her..she lives with you. you are her mommy so to speak...and you both need to bond with each other. who is stronger physically and phychiologically? if all else fails...petsmart and i think petco..too have dog obedience classes. i almost did it..but finally my new sheltie started cooperating. they sense your fear or anxiety or frustration by the way. if shes pulling you .stop walking. even if she only walks one city block nicely...then take her back and give her a treat. rome was not built in a day..do it slowly. dont give up hon..honest...u can do it. its all about love and in a gentle but firm way ....showing her you are in control not her. A HARNASS for sure. no leash or collar there..but a harnass.YOU HAVE MORE CONTROL OVER THE DOGS BODY THAT WAY..OKAY? okay good luck to you ..God bless. marlene in lynnhaven