Carry a baggie with SMALL bites of treats with you when you walk. Hot dog, cheese, boiled chicken breast all work well. I mean SMALL bites - one hot dog can make 88 treats! (I've never made more than 62, lol)
When you see the dog -- this is before he has even started reacting -- have him sit and face you, with his back to the other dog. Keep him busy with treats and tons of praise. If possible, you want the other dog to pass across the street, so you may need to cross with him before you start this.
If he gets up, you move away from the other dog with him. He is not allowed to be rewarded by meeting the other dog if he reacts, because this proves to him the action worked. He has to keep his manners to be allowed to meet the other dog.
In class, the way we do this is walking past one another , starting about 10 feet apart. We start at opposite ends of the room and walk past having the dog keep focus on US. So the command is FOCUS, which you teach by holding the treat up at your forehead. The instant the dog looks, he gets the treat. Once that is working, we start walking closer together. Eventually, we can walk up to one another, shake hands, say hello, and then allow the dogs to meet. The command for this (the one I use) is FRIEND. Some folks use GREET. All this takes about 20 minutes in class. Of course in that setting the dogs know they are there to concentrate and learn, taking it out on the road is our homework between classes, lol.
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