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  1. #1
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    Walking On A Leash UPDATED PICTURES

    What is the best way to train a dog to walk on a leash? I took Daisy for a walk today and it was a constant fight, I dont know all that much about them anyway. Should you keep your dog to your side or let him go ahead of u? The reason i ask is because i think i saw one time that if your dog walks in front of u they will think they are in charge is this true or does it really matter?
    Last edited by timlewis; 03-05-2007 at 06:05 PM.

  2. #2
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    Well- it depends. I do not have a dominant dogs. However my rule is they may walk ahead but if the pull, I turn quickly and reverse direction. They learn quickly we will continue but not to pull ..

  3. #3
    Pulling on a leash is typically not a dominant behavior. Walking on a leash is not normal to a dog, if you do not teach them and show them what you expect them to do, they will do what comes naturally and that means to pull and try to go whatever way they can. Some dogs do naturally heel and walk next to you, others you actually have to teach.

    But luckily, teaching heel is actually pretty simple. You don't even need a leash to begin with. Just call your dog to you and lure her into the heel position with a piece of food while saying heel. When she gets there, give her the treat. Then walk 2 or 3 steps while saying heel. Sometimes it helps to put the treat up near your face at your chest so she's focused on you and looking up at you. I also find it helpful to keep the treat in a balled fist, this makes it easier to fade the treat. Then give her the treat after those few steps. Now snap the leash on and do the same thing without holding onto the leash; let it drag first. This is so you can eliminate any previous experiences with the leash like pulling. Many times, you can teach heel and the dog is great at it, but if you just snap the leash on and go out, it won't work and it'll seem like the dog was never trained in the first place. Once you can snap the leash on and she doesn't get overly excited, then pick it up and again do the heel exercise. By this time, you should only be giving treats periodically and the primary reward for the dog should be praise.

    When you first go outside again, it may be helpful to take treats with you so she stays focused on you and obeys as there are along of distractions out there. It also helps to keep talking to the dog in baby talk, telling her she's a good girl, making kiss noises as you walk, so she stays focused on you. Eventually it'll become habit to walk nicely at your side.

    If she starts to pull, the best thing is just to stop, don't say a word. She'll probably look back at you, puzzled as to why your not moving. Have her heel and then keep going and don't forget to praise her.

    Your probably reading this thinking it's a long hard thing to teach, but really it's not. A relatively intelligent dog will often pick up on it in one training session. Some dogs you will have to work with for a few days, but it's really not all that difficult to teach. Just be consistent and be patient.

    I allow my dogs to walk ahead of me as long as the leash is slacked.
    I'VE BEEN FROSTED!!!

  4. #4
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    All my dogs will walk along on a loose lead- because if they pull, I do an abrupt turn . With dogs higher in the waist to chest in height- This is taught and backed up every time. Consistancy is required. One day it took me 30 minutes longer to get home to make the point. My dogs NEVER pull.

  5. #5
    If you take training classes you will be taught that your dog should always walk on your left....except for special circumstances.

  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by mike001
    If you take training classes you will be taught that your dog should always walk on your left....except for special circumstances.
    Not true. Most housedog obedince classes today don't teach this formal "heel." A "heel" is where you teach your dog to walk at your left side. Most classes these days teach your dog to walk on a loose leash near you. Whether that's on your right or left is up to you. It doesn't matter if the dog is a bit in front or behind. You don't even have to give a command to demand this behavior. As long as the dog isn't pulling, it's doing it's job.

    "Heeling" isn't really helpful or fun for the dog on casual walks. I never make my dogs :"heel" on walks. They're allowed to roam on the leash, as long as it's loose. If I need more control - say walking through a crowd - then I ask for a "heel" where my dog is directly at my left leg. If I stop, my dog stops to sit. They don't go in front or in back. It's a very forma command, and I only use it on walks when there's a real need for it.

    Otherwise, my dogs are allowed to walk freely, as long as they don't pull.

    One story. I was at Petsmart with my American Eskimo, Laika. It was a very busy day, and we were walking through the store with Laika on a loose leash. As I appoached the front of the store, I was going to have to walk her through a very crowed area of people and dogs. I asked her to "set up" on my left and told her to "heel." We walked easily through the crowd with her obeying my command. She walked close to me right at my left leg. After we passed the crowd, I released her from her heel, praised her, and let her get back to just loose leash walking.

    Later in the store a lady ran me down. She said she had never seen anything like that before, and the my dog was the best trained dog she had ever seen (OK, she must not have much experience with dogs!). Anyway, it demonstrates the difference between a heel and loose leash walking.
    MACH Aslan RE, MX, MXJ, EAC, EJC, OCC, Wv-N, TN-N, TG-N, R-SN, J-SN, R2-CL, CGC, TDI, FFX-AG (five year old sheltie)
    Jericho OA, NAJ, R1-MCL, CGC, FFX-AP (three year old sheltie)
    Laika NAJ, CGC (nine year old retired American Eskimo)


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  7. #7
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    Sounds like you want to just get Daisy used to walking with a leash.
    Just normal walking is easily taught, but folks usually start at a very early
    stage in development. Some pups don't like it at first, but with patience,
    eventually catch on. There is also a walking "at heel" method that is a bit more stuctured & precise. You could probably "google" dog leash walking,
    and get a ton of methods that teach the same basic thing.
    I've Been Boo'd

    I've been Frosted






    Today is the oldest you've ever been, and the youngest you'll ever be again.

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  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
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    A dog that goes in front can learn to pull and then they think they have to pull all the time just to keep you moving.
    It's better to teach the dog that you move forward when they walk at your side but that you stop if they try to pull.
    Knowing to walk at heel is also useful for when you approach roadsides and such. You don't want a dog that tries to pull into the road etc....

    Did your dog have any prior experience of the lead before you took her out. Is it her first time with a lead? Try practising with it at home. When you feed her, have somebody put the food dish down and then, with the lead on her, allow her to walk to the dish to get her food etc...also practise in the garden.
    She'll get used to it if you keep practising with her. Don't tell her off or make a scene out of it if she does start dancing about and struggling. Just ignore the behaviour and carry on walking and she'll get tired of it. Our Mist was a bugger for that when I first started her with a lead but she realised it was a waste of time and she was ok walking by the time she was allowed to go out for a walk after her vaccinations.
    I'd just keep walking around the garden with her on the lead.

    Try playing a game with her whilst she has her lead on, one that requires her stay close to you obviously....she'll soon learn that having the lead on isn 't all that bad. Try to keep the lead slack as much as possible, especially at first. Tugging too much yourself won't help but they'll probably cause tugging when they try to struggle but when they stop, so does the tugging.
    Be sure to only have a broad leather collar or harness on her, nothing that will cause pain such a choke chains and certainly not something as barbaric as a prong collar or anything like that. You don't want her to experience pain when she pulls towards something like another dog etc...this can teach dogs to hate other dogs because they blame the pain on them.....

    Anyway, just a few pointers, hope these help.
    Dogs are not our whole lives but they make our lives whole.


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  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by timlewis
    What is the best way to train a dog to walk on a leash? I took Daisy for a walk today and it was a constant fight, I dont know all that much about them anyway. Should you keep your dog to your side or let him go ahead of u? The reason i ask is because i think i saw one time that if your dog walks in front of u they will think they are in charge is this true or does it really matter?

    I forgot to mention that if you are training your dog to enter a formal cd class by akc or ckc your dog has to be trained to walk on your left side , unless in special circumstances. If not training for anything specific, the choice is yours, although out here we still train by the ckc in formal classes....dogs at heel on left side.

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