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Just wondering what other people think- I have a puppy in training the last 2 months. She just turned 4 months. My trainer is having her do so much. She is suppose to sit and stay 1 minute, down and stay 3 ,minutes, heel properly and figure 8's, come, watch me, and finish. I am doing all that because in a month I have an obedience show. Now when it comes to training I usually like to go over everything 2 times over, 3-4 times a day. But it adds up to 30 minutes. I think I am training her too much. But she shows no signs of it. She does everythin right. And when she does start to get distracted I stop immediatly. I just do'nt want her getting burned out on it.

2006-07-08 10:57:26 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Dogs

Just wondering what other people think- I have a puppy in training the last 2 months. She just turned 4 months. My trainer is having her do so much. She is suppose to sit and stay 1 minute, down and stay 3 ,minutes, heel properly and figure 8's, come, watch me, and finish. I am doing all that because in a month I have an obedience show. Now when it comes to training I usually like to go over everything 2 times over, 3-4 times a day. But it adds up to 30 minutes. I think I am training her too much. But she shows no signs of it. And when she does start to get distracted I stop immediatly. I just do'nt want her getting burned out on it.

2006-07-08 11:03:23 · update #1

13 answers

Your training schedule sounds fine - a total of 30 minutes a day spread out over 3-4 sessions is not excessive. As long as your dog is enjoying it there should be no problem. It sounds like you're a little bored with it, though. Ask yourself if you really want to go into competitive obedience trials, because if you're going to continue in it, it will take a significant amount of your time. On the other hand, you will wind up with one extremely well behaved companion.

One thing you said has me wondering, though. You said your puppy just turned four months old and you have an obedience trial a month from now. If you're planning to compete in an AKC sanctioned obedience trial, your puppy has to be at least six months old to compete. You'd better check with your trainer, because you may have to pass on the show you were intending to do and wait at least another month. It won't hurt. From personal experience in obedience trials I can tell you that many people try to rush their dogs into trials and wind up with frustrating and disappointing experiences. I think you'd be much, much happier to continue training your dog for several more months, enter your first trial together and take High Score in Trial than to put your puppy in there when she is barely ready and just squeak by with a qualifying score or, worse yet, have her get spooked by the very different atmosphere of a trial and completely blow it. On top of everything else, if your puppy doesn't qualify you're out the entry fee. I would recommend that since your puppy won't be old enough anyway, you should attend the trial you were planning to enter and just watch what goes on. It will be a very informative experience for both of you and you will be much better prepared when you enter the trial ring.

2006-07-08 11:33:52 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You don't say what breed she is, and that matters a LOT. But I definitely think you're training too much. She will get burned out and stressed out if you put too much pressure on her - and once she is, it's too late. If you keep drilling her on things she does right, she may start to think that she is doing something wrong and give up. How many times would you like to be made to sit and do multiplication tables? Puppy training should be all about fun.

There is no reason that you have to show her at six months - which is the minimum age. Either your math is wrong or you're going to be showing her at five months.

2006-07-09 11:06:15 · answer #2 · answered by Danger, Will Robinson! 7 · 0 0

Hi, I understand that you are looking for some advice or resources to help fully train your dog or fix behavior problems. If a professional dog trainer is not an option at this time, or if you want to trt training your dog on your own (a great way to bond), I'd suggest you https://bitly.im/aMPbF

A friend recommened it to me a few years ago, and I was amazed how quickly it worked, which is why I recommend it to others. The dog training academy also has as an excellent home training course.

2016-05-17 08:43:41 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Every dog will handle differently. 4 months is still very young to expect much but as long as your expectations aren't to high and you train with positive rewards. Watch and make sure your puppy is happy, tail held high, standing erect and not slouched because she is confused. So many people forget to have fun with the competitive obedience and it shows in the ring. Many short sessions threw the day are better then 30 once a day which is what you said you were doing.

2006-07-08 11:03:03 · answer #4 · answered by dpinscsher 5 · 0 0

It sounds wonderful. I trained my dog to do tons of differnt things before she was a year old. She never burned out. The best thing about intense training when they are young is that they learn the process.

I can teach my dog a new trick in a matter of days. She knows the things that I do when I am training- she picks up on thise signals and figures out what I want her to do. She makes connections between what I am doing and what I kept having her do over and over.

If your dog is fine then have fun. She probably is.

2006-07-08 12:25:12 · answer #5 · answered by Lynn 4 · 0 0

I actually have a dachshund and he or she is now a 365 days. i imagine some dogs breeds are extra weak to being extra acceptable at homestead breaking, and some are thoroughly obdurate (like my little woman). I did repetition together with her. It took her about 3 months to finally get the theory of "ok I even ought to bypass to the bathroom on the pup pad", and now she not in any respect has an twist of destiny. even if some human beings say you shouldn't enable your dogs to apply a pup pad, and so you might take them out on the grass. anyhow, What I did with my pup is about each and every 25-30 min (the first day) i'd placed her on the pad, with restricted area for her to bypass round it and wait a pair minutes and enable her bypass. If she had an twist of destiny on the carpet, i'd placed her at modern-day on the pup pad. quite, it sucks homestead breaking a pup. yet i wish I helped somewhat. Congrats on your new pup although! reliable success! EDIT- the reason I recomend pup pads is because, I stay in an apartment the position i am going to't get outdoors and enable her bypass each and every of the time, second even as i bypass to artwork and that i go away her in the kitchen, she needs to bypass to the bathroom someplace. quite, because that she has been homestead damaged I actually have not began to have her have any injuries or the different undesirable habit come from her utilising the pup pad.

2016-11-01 11:23:49 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I wish i was that lucky, i have been training my 2 labs for almost a year now and they still look at me like im crazy...As long as she seem to be enjoying it and isnt showing signs of being bored with it then why not, it give you guys time to bond and also give her something to do. Good luck at your show~!!!

2006-07-08 11:05:45 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

30 minutes is not too bad if you are breaking it into short, fun sessions. As long as she is still eager and the sessions end with her still interested then she should be okay.

Be prepared for the possibility that her attention span will shorten a bit when she A) is teething (sore mouth) and B) hits puberty (especially if she is not spayed, the girls can get a bit wonky when around and in season).

2006-07-08 11:35:45 · answer #8 · answered by DaBasset - BYBs kill dogs 7 · 0 0

As long as the dog is interested then you are not over-doing it. Most dogs love the attention they get when being trained. When mine gets bored of it I stop.

2006-07-08 11:24:19 · answer #9 · answered by Dellajoy 6 · 0 0

keep on training your pup. when she gets distracted then stop for a while that day. It doesn't hurt them and they like the attention and the treats. I still work with my dog everyday. we don't show him but i like him to be obedient

2006-07-08 11:21:51 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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