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Most importantly, be consistent, consistent, consistent! Do not allay if you are aggravating to advise your dog a assertive command. Accumulate the aforementioned techniques for the aforementioned commands anytime repetitive. For example, if housebreaking your puppy, do not belt for one indiscretion, and bawl and abode alfresco for another. This does not advise your dog, and it in fact confuses him on what he should be doing. Do not accord him adverse orders that may ultimately be confusing. Accession way to plan on bendability is to authorize routines. Yield him out at the aforementioned time accustomed for walks, use a assertive bridle for walks, and accession for vet visits, or accord him the aforementioned goodbye pat anniversary time you leave the abode so that he knows you will return. 4) Is feeding time battle time in your household? Has your dog already eaten his food before you have a chance to put his bowl down? Are you being jumped on or bumped and pushed when feeding your dog? Has your dog inhaled his food before you even let go of the bowl? 5) When walking your dog, do you find yourself saying the word "heel" at least a hundred times? The following is a very common scene. Someone is walking their dog, and you hear these strange sounds, over and over again, heel, heeeeeel, HEEL. Of course the dog thinks heel means pull harder, pull in the opposite direction. Or could it mean chase that squirrel? 6) When walking your dog and meeting a friend, does your dog let you stand and have a conversation? 7) When someone knocks on your door, does your dog instantly explode into barking and anxiously wait to embrace your visitor? 8) Are people allowed to walk up and down your street without your dog alerting you about this? I know some dogs believe it is their duty to notify their owners of any movement outside. After all, they are protectors of their property. Any movement could spell danger, right? 9) Can you walk with food in your hand or is this a sign for your dog to grab a snack? Does your dog think that if food is within his reach it belongs to him? Does your dog believe that fingers are part of the food, like doggie "finger food"? If you accidentally drop food, like a chicken or steak or pork chop does your dog temporarily think he is a piranha? Are you afraid of losing your hand if you reach it before he does? 10) If for any reason your dog gets lose, will he come back when called; or is this a sign for him to go gallivanting? A trained dog is not only a pleasure, it is a necessity. Dogs are so much a part of our socializing these days. We take our dogs walking, shopping...to Tim Horton's drive through. Memories! I remember once I had a black lab in the back of my jeep on a hot summer's night. I had the back window rolled down half way. I drove through Tim Horton's drive through. One coffee for me, and a tim bit for my lab. The nice lady at the take out window reached out to give me the tim bit, and my lab lunges for it out the back window...good thing the nice lady loved dogs and understood the combination of labs and food.
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