Monday, 14 December 2009

Progress in Cinnamon's obedience training

To start with, I am sorry for not visiting your blogs for a long time. I promise I will catch up shortly!!

Today I would like to report how Cinnamon's obedience (no barking) training is going. She still sometimes barks at other dogs she sees in her walks, but it is becoming less and less frequent. Now she almost never barks at dogs on the other side of the road or off leash in the park. She only barks at dogs on the lead in a short distance, and sometimes she even greets such dogs nicely without barking. When she barks, it is often my fault rather than hers. For example, being eager to see her behaving nicely voluntarily, I often make a mistake of delaying the Heel command, which I now use to make Cinnamon busy doing something so that she doesn't have to worry about other dogs. If my correction is too late, it becomes hard to keep Cinnamon in a calm state.

Marge's human, Sam, has kindly suggested referring to Leslie McDevitt's book "Control Unleashed" in her comment on my previous post about my struggle to correct Cinnamon's barking problem. Thanks, Sam. Yes, I bought a copy of the book in September and read a third of the book during my flights to and from Japan, but the book has been left untouched on a sideboard since then. As my husband points out, I have a bad habit of buying a book and leaving it after browsing some pages. I like reading books with stories like novels, but I often find it hard to read a whole reference book. Without a story, it is hard to pick up the points that the writer wants to tell. I know that I should take notes of what I have read and learned, but I am so lazy that I usually don't bother to do that and I forget what I have read pretty soon. But I am going to take up the book again, this time to read through to the end.

Going back to the progress of Cinnamon's obedience training, I have been doing "Stay" exercises with Cinnamon as well as "Heel" exercises, following advice from a professional dog trainer who we had a training session with in late November and our great mentor, Honey the Great Dane's human Hsin-Yi. "Stay" is something Cinnamon was no good at. When we were doing agility, I always had to start as soon as releasing Cinnamon's collar from my hand in the agility ring, because she couldn't stay at all when she was very excited. But, after doing "Stay" exercises in our daily walks everyday for a couple of weeks, her Stay is improving gradually. Now she can wait in front of a bakery without barking while I buy bread, although she can't stay lying for a long time.

In fact I am seeing a significant improvement in her general behaviour. For example, together with Cookie she always used to try to steal food from the table before, so we always used lidded containers when we wanted to have food at a coffee table. But, now we can use ordinary dishes, as Cinnamon never tries to steal anything from the table as long as we humans are around. Also, when we go out for a walk, Cinnamon sits at the gate voluntarily before I open it. But, what I am happy about most is that her picking up food from the ground has become much less.

Overall I am happy with Cinnamon's progress. Keeping doing something regularly and continuously is something I am very good at. So, I will keep at it until Cinnamon becomes a well-behaved dog.



Heeling




Staying

5 comments:

  1. She sounds like she's doing great. I, too, never finished Control Unleashed. I actually tend to do the same thing with books as you do!

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  2. wow! Cinnamon is doing so good! Doesn't steal food?! GREEEAAAAT job (:

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  3. Keep persevering and keep correcting. Consistency is the key. I'm like you too. I much prefer novels to reference books :-)

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  4. Good job! Keep working at it and you'll have to licked in no time. She sounds like a wonderful dog to train, so smart and eager.

    I'm just like you on the reading thing. If it doesn't have a story I get bored very quickly. I stick with dog books better than other reference type material, but nothing like when I'm reading novels. :)

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  5. Oh, Cinnamon - you sound like you are doing SO WELL!!! My human says your human should give herself a big pat on the back for being such a good & dedicated owner & trainer. Look at your progress in a few weeks! I can't believe that you're even leaving the food on the coffee table!!! That is a BIG achievement for you! And wow - waiting outside the bakery for your human in a Stay - that is Advanced stuff!!! My human is so impressed. She says that Stay is such a useful command if us doggies learn it well and it means our humans can do so much more with us and take us to many more places, because they can trust us not to run away. It also means we don't always have to be tied up or held or something (like your human said about Agility before) - I hate being tied up and of course, I'm so big & strong, you can't hold on to me by brute force - so my Stay (& Wait) training has been very important for my human managing me well!

    'Stay' is such an important skill and yet so few humans take the time to practise it with their dogs when actually - as you said - all it takes is a little bit everyday, like on your daily walk. That is what my human does too and that is all you need to keep up a very good Stay. We practise variations which you can start to try once you get good at basic Stays - like Sit Stays instead of Down Stays or Stand Stays...and then Stays Out-Of-Sight (when your human walks out of your sight) and Stays near different temptations (like other dogs walking past or people jogging or food nearby) - keep increasing the challenge!

    Isn't it interesting how once we learn to walk nicely, all the other obedience & manners also gets better? I think it is because Heeling (walking & keeping focus on our humans) is the foundation to our respect for our humans. I think now your human will also find it much easier when you are dancing together to keep you beside her in the ring, because you can slowly start to practise Heeling off-leash!

    And you are proof to all those people who think that dog training is just too much work and hassle to be successful - look how much was achieved in just a few weeks, just with regular effort and dedication from your human? (that is the key, because a lot of humans aren't consistent or get lazy and don't train regularly).

    Anyway, well done and keep up the good work! :-)
    Slobbers,
    Honey the Great Dane

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