This entry was posted on Wednesday, June 10th, 2009 at 6:49 pm and is filed under Articles, Dog Training, Laura's Training Thoughts. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Posted By Los Angeles Dog Trainer
Today I spent my first appointment walking with a client’s dog and dog walker. The dog
is a 7 mo. old, male Australian Shepherd. The dog walker has been having trouble with
him jumping up & nipping at her for the first 1/2 hr of the walk, the second half he is better.
We began walking him and within the first few minutes it became very obvious why he was
doing this behavior. She is a very good dog walker who has good instincts and asks a lot of
great questions, so had she seen the behavior from my point of view, she would have realized
the situation immediately.
First off, she was walking him on her right side. Though we haven’t worked much with his
walking, when we have it has always been on the left side, so he was obviously a little confused
about where he should be. But the main thing I noticed was that although she was walking
briskly to tire him out, she wasn’t giving him any feedback. There was very little interaction happening between them. The dog was going to her left side, jumping up at her, and it was as
if he had a big bubble over his head saying “look at me, look at me, look at me!!”
The answer, of course, is he needs more mental stimulation. This is an extremely intelligent
breed that needs as much, if not more, mental exercise than physical. Please don’t
misunderstand, I’m all for physical exercise. However, if that’s all you do you end up with
a stupid marathon runner. A well-exercised dog with great stamina and endurance,
yet he still doesn’t know anything. So if the physical exercise now takes 1 hour to tire him
out, in 6 months you will need 1.5 hrs to tire him out and it will keep increasing from there.
If you think about it, what makes you want to take a nap more? An hour on the treadmill
or an hour of calculus or physics? Personally, an hour on the treadmill gets me energized,
but use my brain like that for an hour & I want to take a nap.
All this stuff about people thinking they can just run the dog or put a heavy back pack
on them (without knowing if the dog is physically fit enough to handle it), and thinking
that will cure all their problems is ridiculous. Mental exercise, of which training is the
most important part, is what tires a dog out the fastest. And at the end of it all the dog will
know what you want/need him to know. At the very end of it all you have built a great
relationship with your dog. And the relationship is what it’s all about isn’t it?
So, you know it occurred to me that I didn’t mention what we did to help resolve this pup’s
boredom during walks. We are going to teach him to touch things with his nose & paw.
That way when they see a construction cone, lawn jockey, or other interesting thing on the
walk she can ask him to touch it with either or both, his nose or paw. When he wants to sniff
a bush we ask him to sit, shake, spin, lie down, something/anything. Then he gets to run over
& sniff the area. We tossed a few treats into a grassy area and told him to find it, so he gets to
use his nose. On our walk we found a big palm frond he wanted to play with. So we picked it
up, asked for a sit and played a quick game of tug o’ war. Asked for a “drop”, then another quick
down, spin, shake, and tug again. He had a blast and it really broke up the monotony for both
the dog & walker. The walk was much more enjoyable and he was thoroughly exhausted at the
end of it!
Laura Bourhenne
AAU
copyright 2010

February 24th, 2010 at 9:27 pm
Good work there. RSS on this blog.
March 4th, 2010 at 9:32 pm
I just cant decide what kind of dog I love the most. Of course I like them all. Thank you for such a interesting website.