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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 #031: Reward Your Dog Without Treats

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

🗓️ 17 April 2019

⏱️ 7 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

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

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

0:25.0

welcome to episode 31 of your new puppies podcast I'm Debbie and today we're going to talk about ways to

0:34.4

reward your dog without using treats. Whenever we're teaching our

0:38.8

puppy something new, treats are usually our go-to. It's simply the easiest and most efficient way to do it.

0:45.6

And even though it is the most popular way, it is by far the only way to reward your dog.

0:52.2

There are so many ways to reward our dog. We do it all the time by accident.

1:00.0

Think about when your puppy wines in the crate and you're not letting him out of the crate but he continues to whine when he's in the crate because that glance over and just looking at your dog is a reward.

1:14.0

And that's why they continue to whine,

1:16.2

even if you're not talking to them,

1:17.6

even if you're not letting them out of the crate,

1:19.2

because just that little bit of eye contact

1:21.8

is reinforcing the behavior because you're giving your puppy

1:24.7

your attention. Or when you have a dog who pulls on the leash, well he pulls and then

1:31.1

gets to sniff the tree.

1:33.0

So the reward is sniffing the tree,

1:34.8

the action is him pulling.

1:36.8

So of course he's gonna continue to pull.

1:39.2

So what we wanna do is take a step back and we can use all these rewards, all these things our dogs see as good things

1:48.4

and use them to our advantage and maybe free ourselves up from the treats a little bit. The simplest way to do

1:56.9

this is just simply to reward them with our attention. There's a study out there that shows that dogs are equally likely to go to their owner for attention than to a stranger

2:07.9

for a treat.

...

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