Saturday, July 24, 2010

Dog Obedience - How To Teach Your Dog "Time Out"

We recently had a friend ask us how to stop her puppy from unwanted behaviors if she shouldn’t be using the crate for punishment.  Here is her question:

“He has these barking and Indy 500 episodes so if I can't get him to chill out after a while, I tell him he is going to "time out..." I can see how it could be a mixed signal, but what else should I do? A child sleeps and plays in their room but when they are punished they are told to GO TO THEIR ROOM. What so you suggest I do when he is being "bad" or needs a time out?


Great question, Danielle!  Every dog needs a job and we can help teach you a job for him that will be a great tool during the course of his life.  All you need is a bathmat or small area rug for him to sit/lay on.  Have him on a leash and walk him up to the mat, put him on it and tell him “Place.”  Walk away while facing him about 3 feet.  He must keep all 4 feet on the mat.  Eventually, he can lay dog, sit or stand, but all 4 feet must be on it.    In the beginning, he will walk right off because he doesn’t understand what you want him to do.  So, you SAY NOTHING and using the leash guide him back on to the mat.  Hold the leash loop in your right hand about belly height,  slide your left hand along the leash to guide him back to the mat.  It is very important not to repeat your command.  You are teaching him that you say something ONCE and he is to do it or else he will learn you will make him do it.  To release him from Place, say “(Insert Pet Name), OK!” and get excited and really praise him with lots of love when he returns to you because he did a great job!

Once he understands that he needs to stay there, you can start increasing how far away you are from Place and the length of time he has to stay there.  At first you will keep the leash in your hand and stand as far away as the leash will let you.  Once you are confident standing that far away, you can begin to upgrade to a longer leash and do it from further away.  The most important thing you can do: If he gets up when you haven’t released him, take the leash, walk him back up to Place and reset him WITHOUT saying a word.   His job is to stay there until you release him.

The good thing about using a mat is that it is portable, so you can bring it to your parents, your friends, a marketing event and the rules are the same: Stay right here until I release you.  You will impress everyone with your well behaved dog in any environment.

Cheat to win!  If you know you are going to be on the computer working, set Place up near you so the leash is within arms reach for you to correct him if he gets up.

It will be a lot of work in the beginning, but it is an amazing command.  What will you do when your dog is full grown and the pizza man rings the door bell?  Tell him, Place.  What happens when you eat dinner, or you have company over and you don’t want him begging for food?  Tell him, Place.  If you drop a glass vase that shatters and he starts running over to inspect the noise?  Tell him, Place.  You have a car full of groceries and need to keep the front door open and don’t want to trip on him coming in and out of the house?  Tell him, Place.  
  
There are a million ways Place will be beneficial to you and your dog.  He needs something to do to occupy his “free” time and you need him to be safe and well mannered at all times.

The picture above is of one of our clients with their dog, Yogi Bear learning "Place."

This information is provided by Tori Lattig of Endless Pawsibilities, LLC Professional Pet Services & Dog Training.  For more information, please call 1.888.320.PAWS or visit http://www.EndlessPaws.com

1 comments:

  1. Ok this is good. I was like yeah whatever in the first few paragraphs. Honestly. You realy tied it all in for me with all the ways it can be used and drove home the point. Thanks Tori. I will try it out ;) Lets see if I can be trained. Afterall, it is all about me being trained, right? :) Thanks a bunch! Danielle

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