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To: Salamander
Tiny movements our eyes miss are, to other dogs, virtual semaphore performances.

THIS I wanted to save and comment on separately. I could not agree more. This is the best thing you said. One only has to train and learn this from our own arm movements, etc.

117 posted on 04/27/2014 5:14:21 PM PDT by MarMema (Run Ted Run)
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To: MarMema

All of my dogs react to silent hand signals that were taught at the same time as the verbal commands.

Mostly because they may be in a situation where I do not want to make noise and also in the event they go deaf later in life.
[has happened]

I have never followed the “push on their rump” school of thought for teaching to sit.

A treat dangled over their head makes them flop into a sit, naturally and they learn the basic hand command at the same time.

Back in the 70s, my kennel club obedience classes insisted we do that so I had to look like I was when I wasn’t and I always apologized to the dog, who already knew how to sit properly, anyway.

Oh well...I did what they said I had to, to earn the dog’s certificate.

I am always willing to absorb new, better ways of training *but* sometimes it seems that the things I did instinctively 40 years ago worked better than all the new-fangled and often conflicting modern stuff.

I’ve been going back to the ‘old days’ of just watching what the dog is saying rather than fussing with some contrived philosophy.

Life was better and easier when I simply listened.


120 posted on 04/27/2014 6:11:53 PM PDT by Salamander (Minstrel In The Gallery)
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