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Jumping, food stealing and destroying

This is a discussion on Jumping, food stealing and destroying within the Obedience Training forums, part of the Self Help Dog Training Forums category; If you had a dog that was jumpy and took food from the children and stole their toys and destroyed ...

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    thainsworth is offline Junior Member
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    Default Jumping, food stealing and destroying

    If you had a dog that was jumpy and took food from the children and stole their toys and destroyed things, how would you deal with that? I am curious to know how your methods would differ from what I have been taught.

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    Mike D'Abruzzo's Avatar
    Mike D'Abruzzo is offline Administrator
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    Default Dog stealing Toys, food and jumping on children.

    Generally, I treat behaviors that are directed toward childrens' toys similar to the way housebreaking issues are taught - using "dog god" corrections. This discussed here: http://www.selfhelpdogtraining.com/C...rrections.html

    This I would also never do unless the family was actively enforcing and communicating the rules taught in the pack structure section here:

    http://www.selfhelpdogtraining.com/P...Structure.html

    If the structure isnt taught in that step - the dog can be left confused why they are not allowed to take control of the childrens toys. Dogs shouyld know to only chew objects handed to them.

    As for food I would suggest teaching a formal "leave it" supervised for about one month if the food is held by children - before doing "dog god" when the dog thinks you are not looking. This will prevent the dog from mistakingly thinking that it is the interaction with the child that is causing the correction - when it is really the food stealing that is the problem. If food is just on a counter top I would go directly to "dog god" unless if you are training a working dog that may have to jump on countertops then do a "leave it" with the food on the countertop - then a "dog god".

    Same idea here with jumping on children. Teach first - then "dog god" later so the dog doesnt get confused as to thinking the child causes a correction. With jumping I generally do an "off" command or a "sit" command though since "leave it" i technically teach as to mean complete disengagement with bthe objectr of focus.

    None of the "dog god" stuff is necessary when dealing with one on one interection with handler of course. It is all personal communication and rules - but we cant expect children to enforce anything so if we are supervising we treat them like an alpha mother would treat her pups and be protective against overly assertive interaction toward them. If you expect behaviors to exist when you are not supervising there is no definite way to do this unless using the "dog god" to always be there in the dogs' mind and follow this until it has become a habit (see golden rules section)for at least a month before thinking of taking the guard down.

    This method of training is flexible, but what we are looking for is to make sure we have the correct things in place for troubleshooting to make it so one we can troubleshoot and two we make it easier on the dog.

    Obviously, we wouldnt try anything obedience or housebreaking based unless we were satisfying the dog's restless spirit in step 6. We would be setting the dog up for failure if we didn't. Step 5 extremely important too for obvious reasons or else we dont even have a starting point to work from.

    Hope this answers your questions. Feel free to share your thoughts since the method is made to evolve with anything that works better and remains as respectful and fair as possible to the dog.

    Good to have you on board!

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    thainsworth is offline Junior Member
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    Default Dog stealing Toys, food and jumping on children

    All of that makes a lot of sense.

    A trick I have used to keep a dog from jumping on counters is to put duct tape sticky side up and tape a string to the duct tape. Then have the string run up to a cupboard where you have a can with some pennies in it. When the dog jumps up their paws stick to the tape and when they come down the can comes after them.

    In the beginning you can just try duct tape as some will stop because it rips hair from their paws.

    This is effective if your dog is house broken and won't chew on anything they aren't supposed to and all you are left with is a dog that likes to roam the counters.

    Tyson

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    thainsworth is offline Junior Member
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    Default Dog stealing Toys, food and jumping on children

    For anyone new to the forum I would like to tell you why I think Mike is one of the best dog trainers out there. I have been training dogs for years and have encountered many different trainers of which 99% are closed minded. They learned one way and they think that is the only way and won't even attempt to look at any other alternatives that might even be better for the dog. This was Mike's last sentence to my reply:

    "Feel free to share your thoughts since the method is made to evolve with anything that works better and remains as respectful and fair as possible to the dog."

    That says it all right there. As much as Mike knows, he still understands that there could be better ways for the "dog" to learn. Mike's ego is left completely out of the situation because it is all about the dog and their quality of life, the way it should be. If trainers would spend less time arguing and more time finding out what works best for dogs, the world would be a much better place.

    Out of all of the top dog trainers including Caesar Millan, I respect Mike D'Abruzzo the most.

    Tyson

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