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18 answers

Hi, I adopted a 3 month old terrier/airdale mix and never had trained her until she was about 8 years old to "stop and Ok " commands and she pick up pretty quickly, then I realized if I had spend some time to train my baby not to climb on the sofa and other easy tricks it would have been worth while, over all she was very smart, if she needed to go outside she would stand by the door or if she was hungry she would give me a stair look, etc, I believe terriers are very intelligent dogs and don't require much training to make them good pets, my baby's name was Cookie and unfortunately I had to put her down when she reached her 14th birthdate. Carmelina.

2007-02-24 08:27:00 · answer #1 · answered by carmelina 4 · 0 0

The dogs that are the easiest to train are the ones who have the smartest owners. This question so obviously has no right answer! Any breed can be and is easy to train and intelligent - it all depends on how knowledgeable the two-footed part of the team is.

2007-02-24 08:33:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you don't really train your dog you train yourself to be an effective pack leader to your dogs by applying the appropriate rules, boundaries and limitations (thanks ceasar). we are guilty of trying to apply human psychology and human emmotion to animals that don't have the ability to rationalize. they care and they want to please but they can only think like dogs and within the structure of a pack of dogs. that being said the proper question is which dogs learn and solve problems the quickest and in no particular order that would golden retrievers, german sheppards, poodles, border collies, labrador retrievers, australian cattle dogs, doberman pinchers, shetland sheepdog and papillons. some will disagree with this list and it is the source of debate but for the most part these dogs are considered to be the most trainable dogs; i.e. they will accept a command at first word 95% of the time or better. however, teaching a dog is completely up to the owner, if you are not consistent and you do not communicate effectively it more than likely that you will not get good results.

2007-02-24 08:23:14 · answer #3 · answered by David W 3 · 0 0

There is no answer to that question since each dog has an individual personality. Succesful training is 50% dog and 50% human by the way.

2007-02-24 07:43:26 · answer #4 · answered by W. 7 · 1 0

It depends on the trainer.If You don't take the time the individual dog needs to be trained it will be difficult, some dogs train right away, some need more. dogs are individuals not just a breed.

2007-02-24 09:24:37 · answer #5 · answered by katie d 6 · 0 0

It all depends on YOU. There is no magic 'easiest for everyone to train' dog.

Like myself, I find Boxers easy to train which many don't. But I find Goldens a nightmare to train (tried to do this with my aunt's dog, and it didn't take). But that's not the case with everyone! You need to figure your style of training. Are you creative, repetitive, ect? For Boxers, you need to be creative. For Geman Shepards and Collies, you can be repetitive.

It also depends how much leadership and presence you have.

We can't answer a question like this for you. It's on YOU to research, to discover how you would train, ect.

2007-02-24 07:31:52 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Dog training is about the influence of the trainer and the abiliity of the trainer to find teaching techniques that work for each dog.

Sorry, but your question is kind of a silly one.

2007-02-24 08:07:24 · answer #7 · answered by Kelly R 3 · 0 0

I have a bernese mountain dog, and when he was only eight weeks old, within two days he learned sit and stay. So, I'd say they are pretty easy to train and even easier to love! But it also depends on the dog itself, not so much the breed.

2007-02-24 07:59:43 · answer #8 · answered by Jessica 1 · 0 0

95% of dog training is people training. You just need to find what motivates the dog. But in general, sporting, herding, and working breeds are easier to train than hounds, terriers, and toy dogs. Why do you think they use Labs for guide dogs, German shepherds for police and detection dogs, and border collies for obedience, frisbee, flyball, agility and herding?

2007-02-24 07:42:05 · answer #9 · answered by Cave Canem 4 · 2 0

i'd advise a German Wirehaired Pointer of the choice gender. different wearing dogs like the springer spaniels you named would additionally be good selections; opposite gender constantly applies. you could practice a dogs to bark on the door or whilst strangers are approximately. A dogs that assaults strangers isn't fairly useful: do you prefer him to attack your babies' pals whilst they arrive to circulate to? maximum dogs rejoice with a cuddle; English Springer Spaniels are widely used for their keen affection. An ESS from looking lines could have a miles less dramatic coat than the practice lines have; you will like it. Schnauzers are basically approximately like that, clearly, however the appropriate neatness you notice on practice dogs is painstakingly precise grooming. All dogs are a similar species and would crossbreed.

2016-12-14 04:47:42 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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