Dog Training Tips: Beginning a New Series
For a very good guide to all sorts of dog training processes and dog behavior challenges, I use and recommend Clickertraining ...that link goes to the description of this terrific ebook you download immediately, wherever you are! -- Rosana
“Dog training tips” is one of the phrases that bring people to this website. So I’m going to do a weekly series, here in the blog, on all sorts of tips for dog training. My plan is to post a tip once a week, and do at least one other dog-related article each week. The tips will usually have suggested actions along with them.
If you have topics that you’d like to see covered in this series, please post them in the comments below. If you’d like to keep up with this series, just subscribe to my weekly Tuesday morning dog training newsletter, which lists all the new articles in the blog. (It also gets you a free copy of my ebook, Seven Steps to Clicker Training Success with Your Dog.)
Today’s dog training tip is so simple that it almost sounds idiotic, but it’s the basis for everything else.
DO find time for dog training, on a regular basis. For some of my regular readers, I know this is a no-brainer… I think some of them are better at this than I am! But for so many people today, there are so many activities that we have to do or really want to do, that time to train or play with our dogs can slide down off the to-do list.
This happened to me recently, when my husband and I made a two-week trip to California. It took a good bit of the two weeks beforehand to get ready, and most of the two weeks after to get back to our normal routines. Total dog training time in that six weeks: 0.
So here’s the suggested action: think about when you are going to do some dog training. It can be 5 minutes a day… really, that will make a good difference over time. It can be two sessions a week. Only you know what you can commit to with a realistic chance of doing it. Write it down someplace. In your planner, if you use one. On something attached to your refrigerator. Writing it down makes it more likely that you will do it– that’s a scientific fact! And putting the plan where you can see it also improves your odds.
What are you going to train? Maybe you know right off, or you may want to think about that. It never hurts to start out with a review of what the dog already knows.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When do YOU train your dog or dogs? Do you have a regular routine? Please post a comment below; I’m sure it would help others to make their own choices.
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!







