I am very lucky. I love my work, and I cant think of
anything I would enjoy doing more.I go to the home and work on a one-to-one basis with
people and their dogs. I work with puppies as young as nine weeks, teaching the owners the
art of reacting to their pets actions. If the dog likes the owners reactions,
it will keep doing the action more and more frequently. If it doesnt like the
reactions, it will do the action less and less. The trick is teaching the owner to
communicate with the animal without getting angry or being irritated, and finding the best
consequence for each individual dog.
I dont use the choke chain, and I show the owners how to discipline after the
fact.
I know a lot of people feel you cant train before six months of age. I believe
you start training a dog the day you bring it home. Just as a child begins at a very early
age to form its core concepts, a young puppy forms its impressions of people through
sounds and sights and tastes.
A young puppy will decide, based on its experiences, that hands are hurtful and
something to be afraid of, or something wonderful and gentle.
It will decide that children are frightening and to be avoided or defended against, or
that they are fun and rather helpless and should be treated gently and respected because
they can summon adults when the pet misbehaves and needs discipline.
It will decide that men are more forceful and women can be manipulated (or vice versa),
or it will learn that every human in the family is to be obeyed because the family works
together.
Probably the hardest thing for people to understand is that dogs do the things they do
because people havent explained the rules of the household to them. Young human
babies are not born knowing what is safe to chew on or eat. They dont know how much
things cost and which things are off limits. For some reason, people think dogs are born
knowing this and are very disappointed when possessions are chewed up or played with and
broken.