dog training

Sled Dog Training Section


 

Sled Dog Training Navigation


|

Dogs Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Dog Training |
Dallas Dog Obedience Training |
Dog Training Obedience |
Dog Training California |
Remote Dog Training Collar |
Boxer Dog Training |
River Run Dog Training Fay Nc |
Dog Behavior Training |
Dog Training Rockland Co |
Mount Nittany Dog Training Club |
Bark Collar Dog Training |
Dog Litter Box Training |
Behavior Dog And Training |
Dog Obedience Seattle Training |
Dog Attack Training |

List of dog-training Articles

Sled Dog Training Best seller

Dog Obedience Trainig
Buy it Now!



Best Sled Dog Training products

Dog Food Secrets
Buy it Now!

 

Healthy Food For Dogs: Homemade Recipes
Buy it Now!

 

Dove Cresswells Dog Training Online
Buy it Now!

 

How I Trained My Dog In One Evening
Buy it Now!

 

Dog Training Mastery - An Owner's Manual
Buy it Now!

 

D.i.y. Dog Training At Home
Buy it Now!

 

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on dog-training
Email:
First Name:



Main Sled Dog Training sponsors


 

Latest Sled Dog Training link added


Submit your link on Sled Dog Training!



 

Welcome to dog training

 

Sled Dog Training Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Sled Dog Training. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

An Alternative Way Of Teaching Your Puppy The “Down, Stay” Command

from:

Teaching a little puppy to lie down is much easier than teaching a big dog to lie down because this command puts the dog in a submissive, vulnerable position. For this reason, puppy or dog, begin this command at home, indoors. Ask your puppy to “Sit.” Now pat the floor, actually tap it and make a sound with your open hand, palm down and say “Down,” dropping your voice to give the puppy the low feeling of the exercise.

Some puppies, young ones in particular, will simply lie down to sniff your hand. If yours does, praise him and pet him so that he relates good feelings to lying down when told. If he looks at your hand but does not lie down, place your other hand behind his forelegs and draw the legs gently forward, repeating “Down, Good Puppy.” Pat him as he stays lying down.

When your puppy seems steady or comfortable, tell him “Stay” and get up and back up a foot or so. Break him with “Ok” and praise him warmly. Repeat up to four times the first day. Continue to practice the “Down,Stay,” adding it to your regular twice-a-day training routine and shuffling it in with “Sit,” “Stay,” and “Come.”

When working indoors on the “Down,” you will probably not need the leash. But if you do, use it. The leash may make your puppy feel more serious. Put it on and let it hang or hold it, whatever works for you. When you say “Stay” and back up, you can pick up the leash handle and take it with you. Your puppy may work better on leash. However, when you begin to practice “Down” outside, the puppy must be on leash so he will not run away or just fool around. But don't start doing “Down” outdoors until he is very comfortable doing it on his own inside. When he is lying down most of the time without the physical assist of pulling his legs forward, you can try the exercise outside.

He may not want to lie down outside on the first few tries. Assist him and then make your “Stays” brief until he gets used to doing this command anywhere with relative ease. Start to increase the time of the “Down, Stay” indoors. Have the “Stay” last five minutes, then one minute, then ten minutes. Do not break the dog because you see he is starting to get restless or starting to get up. He will know that he is controlling the training if you do break him on his clues, so decide ahead of time the length of the “Stay” and stick to it!

If he gets tired or bored, he can fall asleep. In fact, many puppies do. Wake him by gently tapping your foot on the floor. In other words, wake him but do not startle him. In this way, he'll open his eyes but stay on command. Then you can break him with “Ok” and praise him when he gets up.



Other Sled Dog Training related Articles

How Much And How Often Should You Train Your Dog
Teaching Your Dog To Heel Part 1
A Simple Six Step Dog Training Method
Preparing For A Dog Show Part 1
How To Teach Your Adult Dog Not To Bite

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE

This space can be enabled / disabled from your admin panel!

 

Sled Dog Training News

Where the wild things are: Alaska Part II

Editor’s note: After a week of intense Northern exposure without the proper funblock, the author has returned from Alaska – the home of growling grizzlies, wandering wolves and glowing glaciers – with a severe case of funburn. Here’s part two of his cautionary tale.

Read more...


Ultimate Polar Bear Tour: Natural Habitat Adventures Offers Exclusive Churchill Polar Bears Adventure without the Crowds

BOULDER, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The difference is in the details with Natural Habitat Adventures’ Ultimate Churchill polar bear tour, providing a small-group, up-close fall adventure that’s easy on the environment.

Read more...


The incredible journey

The Yukon River Quest runs from Whitehorse to Dawson City. Its infamy within international endurance-racing circles stems from a gut-wrenching two-punch: paddlers cover 746 kilometres, basically the same as racing from Toronto to Quebec City – on hardly any sleep

Read more...


Transcript of Joe Strauss' live Cardinals chat

When will Colby Rasmus return? That's just one of many questions on Cardinal fans' minds.

Read more...


Pets of the Week

"Fuji," a 1-year-old spayed female Chihuahua mix, is 9 pounds of fun and activity. She needs someone who can help her use up some of her energy, like bonding in a Basic Manners training class; rated for children, 10 and older.

Read more...