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I trained the crap out of my dog and everyone is always so impressed with how well behaved he his. It was 100% all of this.

That said, I failed somewhere on the leash training. He's pretty awful on walks until he tires out a bit


Confidence, and a short leash. Your almost holding them by the collar and right at your side, till they get the hang of it. Also a clicker is a great tool or click with your mouth. It doesnt need to be loud as they hear so well. I use a quick ehh with couple tongue click or a quick chhshh to get their attention. When yhey start to move away, a light tug, or stop and click, when yhey look at you get um to sit, then start agian. See if that helps.

The most important thing is consistancy. You can train a dog as well as a pro, but service dogs, the good ones are so good because they also weedout the ones that arent. Most in training are trained as pups with foster homes, The ones that take well to the training move onto the next phase the ones that dont just become normal pets. They are often breed from prior service dogs so the genes are there. I dont know the numbers but lots dont make it. So really its not fair to compare them when your taking the best of 20

I had a dog once that i spent about a year with from a pup. I was hurt and basically spent every day with her for about a year. She wouldnt even blink/budge if i dropped food on the floor. She got fed from her bowl, though i would give her a bone on occasion but she liked her pull toys more. She was a rotti, so she loved tug.

She never begged or blinked when you ate. Then i got better and and was gone most of the time and then my dad was with her more and bbasicallyall that trIning went down the drain as he would give her what he was eating. Even then aroud me she never begged. Still she was one of the best dogs i ever had. I didnt leash train her she was just in a fenced in yard, but my neighbor took her hiking off leash all the time. She did have a prey drive that never went away, she'd take off. but she stop if you called her so that was nice. :)

She caught a pheasant once and brought it yo me as a gift, not sure she knew what to do with it. But the best was watching her and my cat hunt chipmunks together they 'd spend hours doing it., though i dont think they ever got one. That cat was not a good hunter, but it was funny watching him try. A rotti and a cat as best friends is a funny site to see. The chipmunks would hide in this 8 foot long pipe that was too small for either of them. The dog on one end and the cat on the other for hours. The chipper just waited them out, but it was a common occurrence.

Some dogs will always have their quirks,
 
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When I was much younger, and going thru a period of homelessness camping in a forest near a trailer court, some of the guys living in one of the trailers asked if I needed a place to stay, as they saw me bicycling to my tent in the woods each night. So I took them up on it. One day they had planned to go hunting. I didn't have a rifle like they did, nor a hunting license, so they asked me to watch their dog, saying the pads on it's feet would get cut on the sharp rocks on the trail if it went with them.

This was a full sized greyhound by the way that was a former race animal that was adopted as a pet. She was getting very hyped when they walked away, and to make matters worse, this was back when I (and they), smoked pot. I don't know if I could have even held the dog sober let alone stoned, but it eventually got away and found them. When they all came back they looked disgusted that I didn't hold onto her, but I said, you should have brought a stout leash and tied her to a tree!

It was a pretty nice looking dog they named Cashmere, but she had a nasty habit of chewing your socks to bits! I supposed maybe she chewed through leashes too. We had a terrier once named Duke when I was very young that we had to secure in the back yard or he'd find female dogs in the neighborhood that weren't spayed and, well, you know. We had to get stronger and stronger leashes. When we finally used a chain, and he broke that, poor Duke went to another home.

My dog chewed through his leather leash the first time he had to stay at the vet. We've had a couple of people dogsit him, but all of them have refused to do it again because he just whines the entire time and will try to open the door and go out if given the opportunity, which happened once when my brother in law was dogsitting. Luckily the dog didn't run off and was caught fairly easily.

Or catches it! It could happen!!

I'm not sure he has enough of a killing instinct, though he did almost grab a baby duck a while back. He pretty much had it in its mouth when I stopped him. The baby duck wasn't bleeding, but it couldn't walk properly, though it's hard to say whether my dog caused that or it having trouble walking caused it to be caught. I brought it to the vet which transferred it to a bird sanctuary.

Confidence, and a short leash. Your almost holding them by the collar and right at your side, till they get the hang of it. Also a clicker is a great tool or click with your mouth. It doesnt need to be loud as they hear so well. I use a quick ehh with couple tongue click or a quick chhshh to get their attention. When yhey start to move away, a light tug, or stop and click, when yhey look at you get um to sit, then start agian. See if that helps.

The most important thing is consistancy. You can train a dog as well as a pro, but service dogs, the good ones are so good because they also weedout the ones that arent. Most in training are trained as pups with foster homes, The ones that take well to the training move onto the next phase the ones that dont just become normal pets. They are often breed from prior service dogs so the genes are there. I dont know the numbers but lots dont make it. So really its not fair to compare them when your taking the best of 20

I had a dog once that i spent about a year with from a pup. I was hurt and basically spent every day with her for about a year. She wouldnt even blink/budge if i dropped food on the floor. She got fed from her bowl, though i would give her a bone on occasion but she liked her pull toys more. She was a rotti, so she loved tug.

She never begged or blinked when you ate. Then i got better and and was gone most of the time and then my dad was with her more and bbasicallyall that trIning went down the drain as he would give her what he was eating. Even then aroud me she never begged. Still she was one of the best dogs i ever had. I didnt leash train her she was just in a fenced in yard, but my neighbor took her hiking off leash all the time. She did have a prey drive that never went away, she'd take off. but she stop if you called her so that was nice. :)

She caught a pheasant once and brought it yo me as a gift, not sure she knew what to do with it. But the best was watching her and my cat hunt chipmunks together they 'd spend hours doing it., though i dont think they ever got one. That cat was not a good hunter, but it was funny watching him try. A rotti and a cat as best friends is a funny site to see. The chipmunks would hide in this 8 foot long pipe that was too small for either of them. The dog on one end and the cat on the other for hours. The chipper just waited them out, but it was a common occurrence.

Some dogs will always have their quirks,

I'm not sure how good of a hunter our cat is, but he's good enough to have caught at least one pigeon alive and bring it inside. Turns out it was a racing pigeon in training, it had a phone number on a ring around its foot. Luckily it wasn't very hurt and we brought it back to its owner.
 

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