fannygott.com
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Bud learning to wait for his turn

This morning, I made plans to show some video on how I work with Bud on him waiting for his turn in training. This is something that I get a lot of questions on, and something that usually isn’t much of a problem around here. At least not when it comes to training in the house (self control around agility handling training can be more difficult).

In the first session, I tried setting up a training situation where he got to work on his stay-at-station behavior with some other dogs around. Kat and Alot LOVES the dog beds and you have to drag them away from there if they think there’s food, so they were good dogs to include in the session. Bud has had some sessions on the station behavior, but we haven’t done that much in formal sessions. I got frustrated because he would get up and leave the bed and then get back in it quite often during this session. We obviously need to work more on clarifying criteria in formal sessions. At other times, when I’m working on the computer (and want some peace and quiet) for example, he’s really good at staying in his bed for longer periods of time and it often ends with him falling asleep.

So for my second session, I decided to not “train” Bud at all. I would direct all my attention to Squid, and let Bud to whatever he wanted to do. This is how training often is done around this house. I don’t tell the other dogs to get out of the way, they know to mind their own business when I’m training another dog because thats the only way they’ll get rewarded. So I just made sure there was a bed nearby, and then I trained Squid (Very poorly, as you’ll see in the video. I didn’t have a plan for anything we did…). When he was in the bed, I gave him food. If he got up, I just kept ignoring him until he went back. I was much more pleased with this session. He still had some failures, but they were much less frustrating when I never asked him to stay in bed in the first place…

  • reply kristen ,

    Very nice! I like all the updates! Do Alot and Kat mostly just like the beds or does is it a lot about previous training experiences?

    We’ll work on this tomorrow. I need to get beds with nice edges.

    • reply Fanny Gott ,

      Great question! It’s all about training. Thomas has focused a lot on having Alot stay at her station in different settings. And cockers love to get fed without much effort. I was very impressed yesterday when Thomas was teaching a private lesson and Alot helped with demoing, but could stay in a down for long periods of time when he didn’t need her and was walking around. Alot only just turned 4 months old – Bud and I need to work hard to catch up.

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