cute cats and cute dogs

3 years ago
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• Keep your training sessions short, ten minutes is plenty to begin with.
• Any time is a good time to practice really, you don't have to structure all your lessons. Incorporate the training into your daily routine. Get your dog to sit before you feed him or make him sit before you throw his ball at the park. When applied in this manner obedience training will be fun in your dog's mind, and rewarding.
• Make it perfectly clear to your dog what you are asking of him - what you want him to do.
• Make training your dog to sit fun, don't make it feel like a chore, for you or your dog.
• Training sessions should be full of consistent repetition, praise and positive reinforcement.
• Don't expect your dog to immediately learn this, or any other obedience command and then never forget it. It's up to you to reinforce the meaning of your command through repetition and consistency throughout your dog's life.
• Gradually phase out the food rewards you may use in the learning period of a new command. Giving a food treat or reward every now and then doesn't hurt your dog though, even if he respects your commands without one.
• When training your dog to sit for the first time, make it easy for him/her to succeed. Start your training sessions in a familiar environment to your dog, free from other distractions. Master the command in this setting, then slowly make it harder for your dog. Add other variables, throw a challenge out to your dog such as taking the training session to the park or increase the duration of the sit.

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