E-book Category: Dogs E-book Title: The Beautiful Balance - Dog Training with Nature's Template Author: John Wade Book Description: This book is what you need to cognize before you train a dog. Traditional dog training jumps more too quickly into the hands on part of training. The truth is the what to do is far easier and success happens more quicker
once
a dog owner learns how their dog sees the world, how it determines who is the teacher and who is the student. With this information there is no need for treats, no need to teach geometric patterns about pylons, how to stay for a few seconds piece being stared at. These things do not support dogs off the room
table or our guests. If you want a dog that truly comes once
it's called, heels on a loose leash no matter what, knows how to meet folk and more much this is the place you should start. It's a short easy see and wish be the better money you'll ever spend on your dog. - What is a Trained Dog Anymore? - Hard to Find One Isn't It!
- Dog Training Philosophies - The Nice - The Bad - They Ugly
- Nature's Templet ™ - the Beautiful Balance
- Nature's Template's™ the Magic Training Formulae's Three Ingredients
- Supervision -Leader of the Pack Must Always Support Track
- Language - Has To Understand To Discover Any Command
- Speed, Strength, Legerity and Driving - If You Can't Be Caught - You Can't Be Instructed
- Tone and Body Language
- Connecting the Dots
- The Time Line - Learning Curve
Here's a chapter: My interest in dog training springs from a passion I've always had for animal behavior overall. That interest stems from an ethologist's perspective rather then the clinical approach that has become so common in dog training. An zoologist is interested in the workings of animals without the hand of man. How do they structure their societal groups? How do they maintain that structure? I find this fascination whether it's dogs or dingoes, elephants or emus.
A few decades ago I went to watch a few dog training classes and I witnessed which from the perspective of an zoologist was the most puzzling of things. What I saw was dogs being instructed to do things like geometric patterns about pylons, to sit and stay for not more much then a few blinks of an eye, and another things at standards that seemed unlikely to be of any use in the real world.
About always the motivation was for a food treat. This was not only unlikely in the natural world, it was impossible and contrary to everything I'd knowing simply about how creatures like wolves, apes, even as humans learned. I didn't see thing
that would-be support a dog off the room
table, from jumping on guests or to really walk past another dog or squirrel on the street, the sort of practical things dog owners want their dogs to do. So I started asking folk I knew that closely-held dogs that were; let's say a tad unruly, whether they'd considered training. With really few exceptions they had all been to a formal training class at one time or another.
If thing
things have gotten worse rather then better. Take a stroll in an average neighborhood in any city in North America during the dog walking hours and you'll see an awful lot of dogs pull on the leash. After your stroll, try knock on the door or ringing the bell of pretty more any dog owner on the block and wait to hear what happens. What do you hear? Normally mad barking, a few shouts of, "Somebody is at the door! Get the dog! Put the dog in the yard/the crate/the bathroom!" The same dog often gets underfoot on stairways and in the kitchen, jumps on people, gets on the piece of furniture uninvited, doesn't move once
called, or stay put once
asked unless it's for a few brief seconds. Any ability to exert self-control in these situations typically lasts as long as it takes to scarf down a treat.
The irony is that the huge majority of these dogs have been to a formal dog training program and if what their dog owners were instructed to do was correct there are a lot of special inevitably dogs and dog owners. The truth is although that most of what dog owners are instructed to do is not correct and more of what they're told to do is unnecessary.
It has been my experience that most dog owners don't want to end up with "Lassie", they simply want a reasonably civilized companion and that due to the sheer amount of dogs that are not coming out of training classes with useful skills there has to be thing
wrong with the methodology and not the dogs or dog owners. More... | 
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