You Can Take A Well-Trained Dog Anywhere
You Can Take A Well-Trained Dog Anywhere
There are many different reasons to train your dog. You might decide to train your dog to protect your home or to hunt. Some are trained just for the pleasure of it. Dogs are usually very eager to please their masters. That desire makes them a desirable pet. No matter what your reason for training your dog, you will find some common sense ideas to make it easy in the article below.
To introduce a new animal into a home that already has dogs, you should give that animal their own territory. This could mean initially giving the new cat or dog their own room or taking your old dogs out of the house before bringing the new dog in. Because dogs are very territorial, this tactic gives your new dog more leverage and makes your older dogs more reluctant to get aggressive.
With aggressive dogs it is best to begin slowly. Aggressive dogs see themselves as the dominant role in the pack and trying to take that role from them too quickly can result in a negative response from the animal. To avoid bites or difficulty, take small steps in establishing yourself as the pack leader.
When feeding your dog, always expect the dog to be in a calm state and ready to eat. Hyper activity at feeding time will not allow the pet to properly address feeding rituals. Establish a ritual of a calm animal who sits and waits patiently for you to give food. After this behavior is taught, your dog will probably begin sitting patiently as you prepare their food.
If your dog is misbehaving, try to determine why. It is important to work out why your dog is doing what it does. Knowing the reason for poor behavior can make training significantly easier. It is far more difficult to correct an action that you do not fully understand the reasoning behind.
Teaching a dog to know its name is the first dog training task a new dog owner should undertake. The name is used in calling the dog and just in getting its attention. Therefore it is more appropriate to choose a short and easily enunciated name than a longer and more confusing one.
When your puppy is 7 to 12 weeks old this is known as the "fear-imprint period'. If your puppy experiences trauma at this time, he may have the fear associated with this trauma for the rest of his life. Because of this, your puppy's early weeks should include human contact, and contact with other animals. It should also be a positive experience for him, with little punishing, if any at all.
Before crating your dog always allow them the opportunity to eliminate. Young dogs, in particular, have to relieve themselves quite frequently. You can't expect them to not urinate or even defecate in the crate if they haven't been given the opportunity to do so before they are crated.
There are many good reasons to train your dog. You will undoubtedly enjoy your dog more when he is trained, and he also will thrive with the ability to please you. The tips listed above should help you find the best way to curb problems with your pooch.