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Your New Puppy: Dog Training and Dog Behavior Lessons to Help You Turn Your New Puppy into a Well-Behaved Dog

YNP #030: The First 4 Steps to Teaching Any New Command

Your New Puppy: Dog Training and Dog Behavior Lessons to Help You Turn Your New Puppy into a Well-Behaved Dog

Debbie Cilento: Dog Trainer | Dog Behavior Consultant | Owner of Playtime Paws | Belly Rub Specialist

Kids & Family, How To, Pets & Animals, Education

4.8917 Ratings

🗓️ 10 April 2019

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The thought of raising two puppies at the same time can be very appealing. What most of us don't realize is that it doesn't take two times the work...it takes three times the work.

The thought of raising two puppies together can create a lot of warm, fuzzy, and fun images.  They will keep each other company, entertain each other, exercise each other, and create perfect Instagram moments of snuggling together in their bed.

We go into it aware that it will take more work.  Of course, it makes sense, there are two puppies instead of one.  What we don’t realize until we get them home is that it doesn’t take twice the work, it takes THREE times the work as raising one puppy.

When a client asks me: “How to do I train two dogs at the same time?” My answer is: “You don’t.”  Not until you train each one separately so they understand what you are asking. Then you can bring them together and train them as a pack.  That is where three times the work comes in.

AND it doesn’t stop at skills training.  There are many activities you will need to do with your puppies both separately and together.

There are also many reasons for this which I talk about within the episode.

  1. Litter-mate syndrome
  2. You need to have a relationship and bond with each dog on their own and with both dogs as a pack.
  3. Prevent separation anxiety from each other by giving them time apart.
  4. Teach them to have the confidence to deal with any environment with and without their sibling there.

This is A LOT of work to train and prevent behavior problems.  Enough that most dog trainers recommend that you don’t ever get two dogs from the same litter.  It can be done, if you are prepared for it.

If you already have two puppies or if you are set on getting two, I give you some examples on how to tackle all of this work .

If you are still thinking about getting two puppies, I give you the advice I usually give my clients who really want two dogs.

Enjoy!

Transcript

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0:00.0

You are listening to your new puppies podcast. Starting you and your dog off on the right paw. Here's your

0:16.8

host Debbie Salento. Hello and

0:28.0

welcome to episode 30 of your new puppies podcast I'm Debbie and today I'm going to give you

0:35.4

the first four steps to teaching any new command. So essentially I'm talking

0:41.3

about your obedience commands or any kind of new skill you're

0:44.5

teaching your dog. I don't expect you to come away from this episode and be able to

0:50.2

teach your dog any new obedience skill. That's not really exactly the point. The point is that

0:55.5

when we're starting from scratch we really need to build this strong foundation to make

1:00.8

sure that our commands are strong and reliable and these are the

1:06.7

exact steps that we tend to skip. So depending on exactly what you're teaching

1:12.4

their dog there is going to be some kind of variation,

1:16.0

but the foundation they create, the lessons that each one of these teach is universal.

1:23.0

Okay, so the four steps I'm talking about is number one, the lore.

1:27.0

Number two, add the command.

1:30.0

Number three, hide the tree and use a hand signal, and number four, intermittent treats.

1:38.2

So let's go over each of these and what they mean and what we're teaching our dog.

1:43.5

So the lore is without saying a word,

1:47.4

and that's key, we don't say a word,

1:49.4

we encourage our puppy or our dog into the position or action that we want.

1:56.1

So I'm going to use sit as an example throughout this whole episode because we all know sit

2:00.9

and it's usually the first thing we teach our dog. The lore would be taking a treat,

2:06.0

pointing it out his nose, and then lifting that treat up and back towards his forehead.

...

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