
Originally Posted by
SunsetRose
Ahhh, but Canis Familiaris are not wild dogs, and nor are we
They have been selectively bred for thousands of years to be able to sucessfully work among people. If you compare a wild dog, such as a wolf, to a domesticated dog, looking at pet quality, there is no competition as to which one is more easily managable. Dogs know humans aren't dogs, correction based training doesn't go over as well as most would like to think.
I agree with Canis Lupess. Corrections are unnecessary in this situation and ignoring the pleas for attention and rewarding a good, quiet dog, will work very sufficiently.
Absolutely. Do dogs try to get attention? Of course!! (BTW, as many already know, I'm a professional dog trainer with 30 years experience). Dogs have many different attention-getting behaviors. Jumping on you, pawing on you to be petted, some forms of barking, etc. If you give attention when your dog does one of these types of attiention getting behaviors, what are you teaching? You're teaching the dog to do more of them, of course!!
Correcting a dog who is experience crate anxiety can make things much more worse, even to the point of creating seperation anxiety. Please. No correction.
When your dog is acting up, do not let it out of the cage. Do not give it any attention at all. Ignore it. When your dog calms down - even for just a few seconds - then you can let it out of the cage. If you let your dog out of the cage when it's acting up, what are you teaching it? You've got it! You're teaching your dog that acting up in the cage get's it let out!! You're rewarding the bad behavior!
Always pay attention to when you are "rewarding" the dog. Ignore any attention getting behaviors, and over time, they will disappear.
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)
I've been defrosted.
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