Some background info: Casey is an 8 month, spayed Cardigan and has taken two puppy obedience classes (a basic class, and then an "advanced puppy" where they are introduced to agility equipment). She gets one hour of training/walks/fetch/running around every morning and every evening, with some intermittent play time during the day (I work from home). Sometimes she'll get a third walk mid-day if it's nice and I feel like going outside, but most days she gets at least 2 (20-25mins in the morning, 20-25 mins in the evening) followed by at least 15-20 minutes of hard running (we have a large backyard and she loves fetch and tug). So she gets 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 hours of mental stimulation and physical activity each day (and then she has chew toys/kongs/balls to play with/chew on when alone).
I have two general "complaints" about her behaviour that I'd hopefully like to do something about and which I imagine are connected to one another. First is that she is VERY easily distracted, particularly when on walks and second that she is VERY overexcitable when around other dogs and people.
My primary concern is about her behaviour on walks. She is distracted by everything. If a leaf blows past, she's distracted by it, if I accidentally kick a rock, she's distracted by it, if a car drives past, she's distracted by it. What concerns me is that she doesn't seem to be becoming habitualized to any of these things (particularly cars - they drive past us all the time, on every walk, and we take two walks a day, everyday...how could they still be distracting!?!?) We do positive reinforce training (with a clicker) and for walks the training was (and still is, we do this intermittently, but it was heavier before): when the dog is parallel to your seamline (down the seam of your pant) and giving you attention (eye contact), you click and reward (reward goes down your seamline to encourage the dog to stay at that point and not cut you off). The thing is, if we're out on walks and doing this training, she'll look at me to get the treat/kibble, but as soon as she get's it, her head will fly in whatever direction the distraction is (for example, a car driving past) and she'll stop walking directly down my seamline. She'll only look at me again, and align herself with my seamline, when she wants another kibble, and then again, her head will fly in the direction of the next distraction and she will not be align with me until she wants the next kibble.
This is particularly bad when people or dogs are out on our walk (which is where her overexcitement comes in). She basically "rubber-necks" other people or dogs that are in eyesight of where we are walking. There have been many occasions where she's rubbernecking so hard that she's in a "U" shape (her legs are moving her body forward, but her head is turned in nearly the opposite direction). Just last week she walked into a fence doing this (because she's not looking forward).
And her overexcitement is so ridiculously over the top it's almost obscene. She goes crazy when someone looks at her/talks to her or if another dog is near us. She starts lunging like crazy on the leash, whining, yelping, going crazy trying to get to the dog/person. I asked my puppy class instructor what I should do about this, and she said that I should try to distract the dog with something that was a higher "motivator" than the dog/person (AKA - food or toys). The only problem is that Casey's highest motivator IS other dogs/people (I've tried homemade liver treats, peanut butter, cream cheese, hot dogs, hard cheese - she pushes past all of these things to get a better view of the dog). How do I out-motivate that which is her highest motivation?
An illustration: in puppy class, one of the training exercises we did was put our dog in a "down" position in the training room (so about 10 dogs laying on the ground). Then we would start moving away from the dog and moving back in to reward them (with food-treats). As the dogs improved at having us move away from them and remain in the down position, owners would start moving to other dogs to reward them (so I would walk away from Casey and go reward the lab that was laying down a few feet away, and the lab owner would walk over and reward my dog, and so on). Casey was the ONLY dog that could not remain "down" when someone walked over to her to give her a treat. She was so excited someone was walking over to her, she was actually vibrating. She would immediately pop up because she wanted to say "hi" SO BADLY. We did a similar training exercise, except the dogs had to sit in a crate with the door opened and stay inside, and whenever someone walked over to her crate to treat her she would, again, be physically vibrating with excitement that someone was walking over to her.
So my question is twofold - first, am I expecting too much out of an 8-month old puppy? She has improved quite a bit since she was 4/5 months old (she can now walk down the street when someone is on the other side of the street without cutting me off to try and get to them, which she was doing before). Will she continue to improve with age, and perhaps calm down a bit/be less distractible?
Second, does anyone have training tips to improve this, or is this just her personality? In comparing her behaviour to other dogs in puppy class (there were about 10-15 in each class we took) she was BY FAR the most excitable puppy in the class - when most other puppies were tiring out after running/playing and training for nearly two hours, Casey was still going like the energizer bunny. And, as I say in the example above, she was the ONLY puppy who was became physically and visibly excited when someone walked up to her. Most other dogs just lay there calmly and accepted the treat.
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