Week 3 Quiet Command The Beginning
If you can not get Tanner to bark, then you can use his low whine to start with. That being said, some ideas for barking:
- Start outside where he might see something he is interested in barking at.
- If you have time and he starts barking, take the time to practice this then. Some common occurrences of this might be mail man, oil man, dog barking in the distance, unable to get to one of you for whatever reason (and assuming other person has Tanner), video of dogs on YouTube might help. In auto is the obvious, but for many reasons this is not the ideal place to start, although it could be done (more difficult to design it for the beginning point though).
- Sometimes if one of the owners rides a bike that will make a dog bark.
- If you are out walking and he is on leash, that could be a good time to practice with him if he sees a dog.
Here are some youtube videos that I sometimes use in training (dogs are sometimes not fooled or get used to them quickly):
STEPS TO QUIET COMMAND:
Equipment needed: Leash, training collar, and food reward
STEP 1: Place leash and collared dog in area or environment where whining and barking are likely.
STEP 2: Have a food reward already in your hand before beginning.
STEP 3A: During whining or barking, give the command that we are teaching "Quiet". If the dog stops barking or whining then, say yes and deliver the food reward.
STEP 3B: If they do not stop the whining or barking, then give the "no" verbal marker followed by the collar correction to try to distract them at this point. If the dog stops barking, then give them the release marker "yes" and food reward directly following.
STEP 3C: If you find yourself in a situation that is an overload or flooding the dog, you can simply wait until they stop barking, say "Good [Dog's Name]" (good being the marker word for good job and continue doing that) immediately at that event and then give the release word "yes" with food reward following directly after. NOTE: Sometimes just saying "yes" (instead of giving the good marker) and food reward is appropriate because the dog does not have the impulse control to wait and continue at first.
STEP 4: Repeat with keeping in mind that a goal to get to is four in a row where the performance is like STEP 3A for each repetition.
STEP 5: Unless you have a real opportunity to practice this for a long time, 5 minutes or less is usually the time for the opportunity to practice this before the dog settles down and does not repeat the bark or whine.
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