I went ahead and bought a clicker a couple days ago and began with introduction training yesterday, which is basically click, treat, click, treat. I did two sessions yesterday and two today, each time with about 25 bean-sized treats. Here is my experience so far:
With Tommy: Wonderful. He was a bit startled and jumpy at first with the "pop" sound but he quickly tied it in with tasty treats and he is an extremely enthusiastic student. I did the two sessions yesterday of just introduction, click, treat, click treat. Two different times with about 25 bite sized treats each. Today earlier, I did a session with eye contact, holding the treat up to my face and clicking as he looked at me and then rewarding. This afternoon I began holding the treat out to the side, and the moment he looked at me instead of the treat, I clicked and rewarded. He picked it up so fast that he was getting rewarded for looking at me and not the treat. He couldn't help watching as I held the treat out but the last half of the session he would watch me hold it out, then look back at me after a second or two without me saying his name or anything to grab his attention. He's loving the whole thing, thinks it is loads of fun.
With Tasha: Not so great so far. She's always been a flighty girl, and that pop makes her jump every time. She trembles and tries to go hide. She ignored the treats I had at first, until I switched to cheese cut up into little tidbits. I have just kept up with the first introductory exercise with her. The last session I did today, I think I finally saw some improvement. At first as soon as I started getting out the treats, she was interested but also cringing and slinking around. I try to keep the clicker in my pocket and click it from there to keep it a bit more muffled until she can get more accustomed to it. I also started adding enthusiastic praise with each treat which seems to help a bit. I just don't want training sessions to turn into something fearful for her, but I think if I just keep it up she'll desensitize to it. It didn't help at first that Tommy, who I had closed upstairs, could still hear his crying all the way downstairs because he felt left out. This afternoon I put him outside and I think she was a bit less nervous not hearing his crying.
I'm very excited about Tommy with this, and a little anxious with Tasha. I want to be sure and be persistent yet not forceful with her in any way. I hope I'm doing the right thing but if anyone has other suggestions I'm all ears.
After a search on the net I see a book called "Click For Joy" that has high reviews and I'm thinking of getting that.
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