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Monday 7 June 2010

Be the Top Dog

Be the Top Dog

When you’re trying to train your dog, it’s important to understand how your
dog thinks.

Dogs are pack animals, first and foremost, and that’s something you need to understand to have the best possible relationship you can with your pet.

If you understand this basic concept, it’ll be easer to train your dog.

Dogs are happy to be around humans and make excellent companions
when puppies and adults.

They naturally take to people and families because their instinct
for packs makes it easy for them to find a place in a group.

Pack animals separate their pack into levels, with the leader of the pack at the top.

This leader sets the direction for the pack.

The next level is like the second in command, and each one down has less
dominance in the group until you reach the bottom.

When in a pack, dogs understand where each animal in the group sits on that pyramid, and they fall into those roles naturally.

Because it’s their instinct, dogs will also naturally want to be part of a pack, or group, and that’s what makes them fall so easily in a family group of people.

When you bring a puppy or even an adult dog home, it automatically views
everyone in the household as part of a pack.

And by instinct it needs to immediately determine where it falls into the family pack; it needs to understand what level it belongs in.

Your dog will need to understand who leads and who follows.

Problems arise when no one seems to be the clear leader.

If you don’t establish yourself as head of the pack right away, your dog will be uncomfortable that there is no leader.

And your dog’s instinct will be to become the leader, to ensure that the pack is strong.

Even a puppy will attempt to fill the leader role, because it knows that there must be one.

If you establish yourself as the leader right away, though, your dog will fall
into its spot on the pack pyramid and happily view you as the one in charge.

There are several important things you can do to make sure your dog knows
that you’re the boss.

• Physical contact.
It’s important that you pet and groom your dog.

Even if your pet doesn’t like being brushed or having his nails clipped,
don’t show that you’ll defer to his wishes.

• Ground rules.

Don’t let her chew on your shoes because you think it’s cute, unless you want her to chew on your shoes forever.

You’ll confuse her later for punishing her for doing the same thing.

• Be consistent.

If you don’t want your dog to something, stop him every
time and don’t ever let it go.

Be consistent with your praise, and do praise your dog when he does things right.

Following these basic rules to establish yourself as in charge will save you
a great deal of frustration as your puppy grows.


John Caldecott.




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1 comment:

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    Thank's.

    ReplyDelete

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