Hi all! Story is almost 8 months old now, and has been fabulous through 3 obedience classes. I had her pulling under control by using a non-pull harness, (has a loop around each front leg, leash attaches between shoulder blades and tightens when she pulls) but she hated having it put on. When she saw me pull out the harness and leash she was NOT excited to go for a walk, so I would have to trick her into it (hate that!). Her trainer recommended an Easy Walker harness instead, which attaches at the breast bone and pulls the shoulder blades together front the front. Yuck, she hated that one even worse and would lay down on her walks. I went back to the other harness and she would hunch her back when I put it on her, clearly telling me that something was not comfy. I put her in a martingale collar for walks, and she is happy, happy about her walks again BUT she is pulling like a sled dog. I went back to basics, changing direction, stopping when she pulls, using lures to keep her attention, etc. and nothing has worked. I googled the fitting of the collar and am certain that it is adjusted correctly. She was lovely to walk in the first Non-Pull harness I put her in, once she got over the stress of having in put on. The fit appeared to be great, but I wonder if the metal ring at the top pulled on her hair. I'd appreciate your expertise and suggestions, thanks!
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What I did is teach heel off-leash. Pulling can be self-rewarding for some dogs and hard to stop with the leash.
I started in my basement, but any large indoor space will do. I used a treat as a lure to keep the dog at heel position. Use the lure, treat often. When the dog is walking correctly, say "heel" and treat. Change direction, make the dog get used to focusing on you.
After a few days of this, then fade the lure and ask the dog to "heel" without the lure. Still treat often for correct response. Since you are inside, the dog will probably follow you closely because there are no distractions.
Once the puppy is heeling well without a leash, then snap a leash to the collar but let it drag on the ground. Say "heel" and treat often. Then progress to picking up the leash. The leash should stay slack because the dog is already heeling.
Then you switch to a safe outdoor location with few distractions and start again with no leash, using a treat as a lure. Gradually fade the lure and then go through the other steps (having the pup drag a leash before picking it up.)
If this is not possible because you lack the space, you can alternately "capture" correct behavior by saying "good" or "yes" and rewarding whenever the dog walks next to you.
If puppy is home and confined for long periods during the day (as most puppies are since we have to work) then it is not realistic to expect them to walk nicely at the beginning of a walk: too much pent-up energy. But later in the walk you can start asking for better behavior.
Thanks for that reminder, Beth! We did a lot of the off leash heel in her last obedience class, but it just hasn't transferred to our walk, so she really needs more practice. I took Story into school with me today since only a couple of people would be there, we practiced heel off leash in the halls and on the playground, she was so good! She is not confined during the day, in fact she gets to play with another dog at Grandma's on most work days, but I'll take your advice and wear her down a bit and practice some off leash heel before we go on our walk tomorrow. Thanks again!
Don't be afraid to use a treat as a lure on walks to get her attention and remind her of what she's supposed to do. You can then fade away the lure over time.
I always have my treat bag, lately it's been harder to keep her attention with the treats on walks (training at home is not an issue). There are some treats (Blue Buffalo, I think) that I called "puppy crack" because she would do ANYTHING for it! Then it was the jerky, but she's grown bored with that. I need to find another 'high value' treat to alternate. I try to stick to either organic (jerky) or corn/wheat/soy free. Do your babies have any favorites you would suggest?
Thanks! I went back to the first non-pull harness for now and worked on the off-leash heel today, like Beth advised. I will keep the halter in mind for the future, thanks for sharing your info! I see what you mean about not wanting to hide the adorable Corgi face, LOL!!
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