The importance of obedience training
Every year the summer doldrums fade fast
and soon it's time to get ready for school bells, soccer practice, heel on
leash, sit and stay, and come-when-called. When Johnny and Suzie are doing their
homework, Baron will be attending obedience classes to polish his manners and
maybe get ready for competition.
The depth and breadth of canine learning
pales in comparison with 13 years of schooling for human children, but it is as
crucial for a successful family life. A dog that does not sit, come, or stay on
command is a dog with great potential to become a family pest and a neighborhood
nuisance or worse.
Obedience training is not to teach dogs to
do tricks or competition exercises, it's to train dogs to be obedient, to do
what they're told to do. It covers a wide range of lessons a dog can learn,
including tricks, family manners, show ring exercises, and skills
demonstrations. Sniffing dogs, service dogs for handicapped owners, search and
rescue dogs, sled and carting dogs, hunting dogs -- all carry their obedience
training to the highest degree. They have been trained to obey an unusual set of
commands that increase their value as helpers to man.
Canine senses and learning styles
Canis lupus familiaris the domestic dog
is a different species than Homo sapiens man, woman, and child. We are
taller, have opposable thumbs, can communicate with words, and have a sense of
time; Baron is shorter, has more powerful senses of hearing and smell, and gets
around much faster on his four legs. These obvious differences are more than
physical they influence the way the dog learns as well as they way he looks.
Things sure look different from a dog's eye
view. As a predator, the dog has binocular vision, but his eyesight is more
attuned to movement than details. His field of vision is cluttered with objects
that are between a few inches and a few feet tall, objects such as chair and
table legs, kitchen cabinets and appliances, doors he cannot open, wastebaskets,
laundry baskets, bed frames, and bookshelves. The dog's limited field of vision
can be a help or hindrance in training; you must appreciate it to decide which
it will be.
Stormy's moderate sense of taste is dwarfed
by her ability to use her nose and ears. She can smell a treat in your pocket,
find an odoriferous sock, or locate some vile-smelling stuff to roll in with
scarcely a moment's notice. She can hear a refrigerator door opening or a can
opener working, and she can tune out the most frantic calls and commands at her
pleasure. Her senses of smell and hearing can be used to advantage or become
maddening distractions in training.
Fluffy's sense of touch can be a major
player in her learning style if she is not accustomed to walking on a variety of
surfaces, if she startles at the touch of strangers, or if she is so insecure
that she leans on Mom's leg during training class.
Dogs do communicate, but they do so in a
foreign language. Their barks, roars, howls, whimpers, whines, and growls can be
distinguished and understood with a little effort. Some dogs are very vocal;
they burble and roar and woo-woo as a greeting, an attention-getter, a
mood-indicator, and an expression of joy. Owners must learn the difference
between these words and songs and the growls that indicate dominance
or aggression and the chatter that accompanies stress.
Like children, dogs are eager to learn.
They may not want to learn what you prefer to teach, but they will learn
something from every lesson you give even when you are not trying to teach
them anything.
Along with species' differences in learning
style, dog owners have to contend with breed differences and individual
differences. It is no accident that the top obedience dogs come from the herding
and sporting groups, the conglomerations of breeds developed to work with man
and obey his signals. It is also no accident that the most difficult dogs to
train are the independent breeds of the hound and working groups, for they were
bred to think on their own and they are easily bored by repetitive instruction.
However, although Border Collies and Shelties and Golden Retrievers are
excellent competition dogs, every Border Collie, Sheltie, and Golden presents an
individual challenge to the trainer.
Puppy kindergarten
School for puppies begins the morning after
they join your household. An eight-week-old puppy can quickly learn to sit for
his food or a treat, walk on a leash without pulling, and come when called
without formal classes. However, unless the household is full of dogs and kids
coming and going at all hours, the puppy will not get his critical socialization
at home.
Most clubs and training schools offer a
puppy kindergarten class that fulfills two goals: helping the owner understand
the puppy and exposing the puppy to the world. Puppies should not be subject to
regimented lessons in these classes but should learn basic commands, play a bit
with other puppies, and learn how to behave in a friendly and stimulating
community.
Many veterinarians prefer that clients keep
their puppies at home at least to the age of three months so that vaccinations
have a chance to protect them from distemper and other diseases, so they should
not be enrolled in a class before that age.
Elementary obedience
This is where the work begins. Up till now,
training has been a game for Charger the challenge is to keep it that way as
the pup grows more and more independent. Some of the fun wears thin in the wake
of chewed socks, soiled carpet, and adolescent dares, but if you can get through
these teenage years, you'll have the basic foundation of a lasting
relationship.
Persistent and consistent practice, a sense
of humor, flexibility, and a thick skin are necessary to teach manners to a
growing puppy or young adult dog.
See tips from an expert on keeping Rambo
and the kids interested in training and check Vicki DeGruy's Obedience questions
and answers for answers to a few common questions about obedience classes.
A lifetime commitment
Learning for all animals is a lifetime
commitment. Just as education for humans does not end with a high school diploma
or a college degree, so the graduation certificate after eight weeks of training
class does not end Flash's brush with scholarship. Dogs learn constantly, but
they may not be learning the things you planned to teach.
In the old days even a generation ago
many dogs were allowed to come and go as they pleased. Suburbs were less
crowded, no one ever heard of neighborhood covenants that limited pets and
fences, pooper-scooper laws were few and far between, and litigation was the
exception rather than the rule. A dog that didn't want to be bothered by the
kids could explore the neighborhood instead; today, he has nowhere to go. A dog
that was out of sight was also out of mind; today a dog that is out of sight
must be constantly in mind if he's not the victim of an accident, he could
bite someone who chased or teased him, scare someone who is afraid of dogs, get
picked up by the dog warden, join another household by choice or default,
destroy the neighbors garden, torment other dogs or cats, all activities that
can result in injuries, lawsuits, financial loss, or grief.
Today it is a challenge to keep dogs at
home, especially since the canine penchant for digging, disobeying, making
noise, soiling yards, wearing paths in the lawn, escaping through open doors,
and other inconvenient habits put a damper on the fun of owning a pet. Obedience
training is the only way to ameliorate the impact of these annoying canine
activities.
Dogs are pack animals. If they are not
taught from an early age that humans are the pack leaders, they will jockey to
gain that position for themselves not because they are necessarily bullies,
but because nature abhors a vacuum. If you don't fill the slot, Rambo will; if
you don't do what's necessary to hang on to the job, Rambo will take over, inch
by inch.
So, when you pack the kids off
to school this year, make sure to take time for
Ranger's education as well. Puppy kindergarten,
basic obedience, a refresher course all are tools to
help build the best relationship possible with the
family pet. Tuition is modest, supplies are minimal,
and the rewards are immeasurable.