Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When our puppy was high energy we ran him in the yard, chasing balls before taking him for a walk. OR we took him for longer walks (when he was older). He'd try pulling at the start, we'd correct him, and after about 20 mins he'd get the hang of it. It's about practice as much as anything.
don't let the dog take you for a walk, you keep them at your side and if they want to go sniff / pee you say "wait" and when you get to the next tree you say "okay" and loosen the leash and they go to it" and you say "come on" and it's time to leave
training 101
OP here - dog doesn't pull me, rather I have to pull her. She just sits and doesn't move. How do I get her to move on a walk? I bring treats but it doesn't motivate her much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When our puppy was high energy we ran him in the yard, chasing balls before taking him for a walk. OR we took him for longer walks (when he was older). He'd try pulling at the start, we'd correct him, and after about 20 mins he'd get the hang of it. It's about practice as much as anything.
don't let the dog take you for a walk, you keep them at your side and if they want to go sniff / pee you say "wait" and when you get to the next tree you say "okay" and loosen the leash and they go to it" and you say "come on" and it's time to leave
training 101
OP here - dog doesn't pull me, rather I have to pull her. She just sits and doesn't move. How do I get her to move on a walk? I bring treats but it doesn't motivate her much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When our puppy was high energy we ran him in the yard, chasing balls before taking him for a walk. OR we took him for longer walks (when he was older). He'd try pulling at the start, we'd correct him, and after about 20 mins he'd get the hang of it. It's about practice as much as anything.
don't let the dog take you for a walk, you keep them at your side and if they want to go sniff / pee you say "wait" and when you get to the next tree you say "okay" and loosen the leash and they go to it" and you say "come on" and it's time to leave
training 101
OP here - dog doesn't pull me, rather I have to pull her. She just sits and doesn't move. How do I get her to move on a walk? I bring treats but it doesn't motivate her much.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of chew toys and redirection when nipping. My 6 month old now rarely nips because she's lost all of the baby shark teeth.
Anonymous wrote:We have a 10 week old lab mix and she is great! BUT she is like a little jumpy land shark when she gets going, usually after naps. How do we correct this behavior? She jumps and nips at our kids (who are young) and they aren't able to redirect her very well.
Also she isn't great on walks - how do I get her to leash train?
We have had a dog before but that dog wasn't very high energy and was pretty lazy.
Anonymous wrote:When our puppy was high energy we ran him in the yard, chasing balls before taking him for a walk. OR we took him for longer walks (when he was older). He'd try pulling at the start, we'd correct him, and after about 20 mins he'd get the hang of it. It's about practice as much as anything.
don't let the dog take you for a walk, you keep them at your side and if they want to go sniff / pee you say "wait" and when you get to the next tree you say "okay" and loosen the leash and they go to it" and you say "come on" and it's time to leave
training 101