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Ok, i have thought about clicker training my 14 week old puppy, and I noticed you can buy them for like $2. Is it because the batteries die so easily? Where can I buy one(in a store, not online)? What is some pros and cons about them? Or any iformation you can give me.

Thanks
♥ A ♥

2007-01-27 12:33:14 · 12 answers · asked by daddyzgrl4u05 2 in Pets Dogs

12 answers

I've never seen a clicker that takes batteries. I bought mine at PetSmart for $1.50 and it's simply a bent piece of metal that you push down on and release for the click sound. Very effective and is pretty durable so far. I like that the dog associates the click with doing something good so quickly. I haven't found any cons to it yet. Just an added pro of training a dog along with treats.

2007-01-27 12:38:20 · answer #1 · answered by MasLoozinIt76 6 · 1 0

The click is a bridge signal that you use to "mark" the behavior that the dog is doing at that moment. It's a very precise tool! In teaching a behavior, it's most useful to use these with a bunch of really great treats (cubed chicken, ham, burger) ready to go.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESZozdpmQMs
There are video examples that you can watch to get your timing right.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RibWunqr-Lg

The downside is tht the mechanics of juggling dog, leash, treats, clicker can be hard. But there are some great classes to take and you and your dog will have a lot of fun learning new things. You can get quieter clickers or use a ball-point pen that clicks to retract the pen if your dog is scared of a louder click.
And it's fine to use food or a toy as a reward. The correct sequence is:
1. Dog offers behavior
2. Person "clicks" when behavior is correct and then
3. immediately offers a reinforcer, toy or food.

2007-01-27 14:29:30 · answer #2 · answered by Misa M 6 · 1 0

I am not a big believer in clicker training. Instead I use marker training. When the dog performs the desired response, I say "yes" and I "mark" the performance. The same thing goes for negative behavior. Clickers are not always around and they are a pain for me. They work well with others and that is fine. If you want more info on marker training visit leerburg.com and listen/read what Ed has to say about it. Good luck.

2007-01-27 12:44:45 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it extremely is been awhile because I truthfully have examine something on clickers. I *think of* the assumption is which you have performed such fairly some repetitions of down, accompanied via a reward (ideally, i've got self assurance the nutrition reward is phased out, so as that the "click" is the reward), that when the command is given, the dogs performs. further to the reality that once you employ corrections, as quickly as the habit is located out, you do no longer could constantly provide corrections. it is likewise the comparable thought as once you employ treats for postive reinforcement, in spite of corrections. the clicking only tells the dogs what they did replaced into maximum suitable, helping the dogs to be taught what's asked. education contains persistently performing the habit to instill that habit in them. you're able to get to a factor the place while the "down" command is given, the dogs does it, without or with reward so the clicking isn't constantly mandatory. you're able to no longer want the clicker each and every of the time to have the dogs hear to you. and that i do have self assurance that there is an component of ignoring the undesirable habit. i desire to tension, i'm no longer a clicker consumer (I truthfully have seen demos in agility). i replaced into only attempting to respond to the question per what i understand, yet I truthfully am no professional and defer to those with lots greater adventure.

2016-12-16 15:09:22 · answer #4 · answered by spadafora 4 · 0 0

Clicker training is great because it focuses on positive reinforcement- this keeps your dog happy. However, your dog needs to be food motivated if you are going to reward with treats. (My dog isn't food motivated so it wouldn't work out for me.)

A con would be that this training probably requires the most consistancy of many training methods.

All in all, I'd say go for it.

2007-01-27 12:39:33 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think you can but all manual ones, with no batteries - but really, anything that makes the same noise will do. You could probably make your own. I chose not to bother with clicker, as i wanted him eto respond to me, not just the treat (although we do still use treats) anyway, it is tried and tested and works, so good luck!

2007-01-27 12:38:39 · answer #6 · answered by rose_merrick 7 · 0 0

You can by the puupy training kit at Petco or Petsmart. It comes with a book and the clicker. Look it all up at clickertraining.com

2007-01-28 00:35:51 · answer #7 · answered by KathyS 7 · 1 0

They have some at petco, and petsmart. They are the manual clickers, they don't take batteries and are less than $5.00

2007-01-27 12:40:20 · answer #8 · answered by Melissa 2 · 0 0

well with the clickers you use them to get dog's attention. dont use it during training or it thinks they are doing something wrong.
use it when you take walks or when it gets distracted going 2 the bath room.

2007-01-27 13:16:36 · answer #9 · answered by lawrence d 1 · 0 2

i havent tried it but i dont think they use batteries... from how i have seen them its plastic with some metal thing and it makes a click sound when you push it
good luck

2007-01-27 12:38:02 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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