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German Shepherd Dog Club of Greater Cincinnati
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Welcome to this new page. I'm going to be listing tips for training your dog or puppy. Over the years of training my own dogs, teaching classes, and talking to dog owners on the phone. I hear the same stories over and over again. I ask the same questions. I offer advise. Each dog and situation may be slightly different, so this is generic advice I offer here. Please keep this in mind (this is my disclaimer). Also, advise may vary from trainer to trainer. If you tell me you are going to another trainer, I will not tell you they are wrong, but may offer other alternate methods. These are my thoughts/suggestions/tips I'm sharing. If you use these, please give me credit. I'd love to hear some feed back from you. Sincerely, Kath Cook Humans as Pack Leaders Pack animals, especially males, seem to be ready to challenge to be the pack leader if they sense weaken in the current pack leader. This keeps the pack "healthy". However, humans tend to make poor pack leaders. An "unhealthy" and unsafe situation generally ensues. Many of these dogs end up ruling the family, put in the back yard in a kennel or on a chain, end up at the pound, in rescue (if they haven't bitten anyone, yet), or euthanized. The lucky ones are rehabilitated with time and training. My first observation is that Mike and I have had German Shepherds, male and female, for over 30 years. We have NEVER had one question our authority or try to become the pack leader over us. Are we lucky? I don't think so. We never allow them to think we are weak pack leaders, so they have no reason to feel obligated to become the pack leader. We are confident enough with our leadership, that we can do many things that you should never do (we allow our dogs to sleep on the bed, play tug, play rough). I don't recommend these activities with dogs with dominance issues. The calls I receive are generally owners of MALE GERMAN SHEPHERDS, 9 MONTHS old or 18 -24 MONTHS old. These dogs are taking over. They are either teenagers, testing the waters, or adult males coming into their full maturity. It's their obligation to challenge. My advise should have been asked when these dogs were 8 weeks old. TRAIN TRAIN TRAIN. Establish his place in the pack Take your puppy to training classes. Since you haven't started at 8 weeks, it's going to take a LOT more work. Take some assertiveness training. TRAIN TRAIN TRAIN. Establish his place in the pack. Take your dog to training classes. But make sure the training classes you attend actually teach control methods! Rules to Training your Dog
House Breaking your Puppy I've come up with a flow chart to assist your effort in housebreaking your puppy. Pick an extended weekend and concentrate on
your puppy's toilet habits. Your days will be boring and will consist of
"Take the puppy out, bring the puppy in." "Take the puppy out, bring the puppy
in." "Take the puppy out, bring the puppy in." You get the message. There are
additional help tips on the bottom of the flow chart.
Click here for flowchart. |
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