Raising Your Puppy
Michael Ellis
- Treat your dog like she is the greatest dog ever!
- The most successful dogs start training early in life. The more you put in the more you get out.
- Genetics matters about 30% and training matters about 70%. Genetics matter but the dog’s potential can only be truly brought-out through training.
- Planning is a huge part of success. Seek out distraction-free zones to train the dog. Each dog will have their own threshold of distractions. Some puppies will be distracted by everything like leaves, the winds, etc. Others won’t be distracted by much at all.
- Don’t force puppies, you will cause them to “turn-off”. We want puppies to love training.
- Each puppy has her own timeline of progression. Don’t make comparisons. If things aren’t going well, it is ok to stop and come back later. We want to set our dogs up to succeed.
- Use the puppies natural energies at each time of the day to plan your training sessions. Best to train the crate when the pup is naturally tired opposed to when she is naturally wired. Active sessions should be when the pup is naturally more energized.
- 3/4 of your life, lol, is spent redirecting and managing puppies.
Bringing Your Puppy Home
- Bringing your puppy home starts before you get the dog. The dog will need areas of inclusion, isolation, crates, chews, toys, leashes, collars & harnesses. You will need to puppy-proof the house by removing breakables and tip-able items from tables and displays, remove cables and wires, remove poisons including plants.
- You will need to decide where the puppy will go potty.
- Did the breeder begin crate-training?
- No formal training for the first week or so. This includes but is not limited to foot-markers, luring, and marker training (yes, no, good).
- We want the puppy to spend that first week adjusting to their new home and new parents and form a bond with us.
- We should spend this time doing relationship building exercises like letting them eat from our hands.
- Contact with other dogs should be limited in this time and x-pens should be utilized to create separation between the dogs to keep them out of trouble but still allow socialization.
- Read the puppy during this time, get to know her, and let her get to know you.
- Within the first couple days of bringing pup home, start taking her on field-trips. Take her many different places. Talk with your vet first though about appropriate places to take your pup as she won’t be fully vaccinated for a while.
- Also start habituating them to their equipment such as harness, collar, and leash. Leashes should be lightweight and not have a loop at the end—loops get caught on things and hang-up the pup. Let pup drag the leash around, attached to both the harness and collar, though obviously at different times.
- Keep a training journal with information like:
- Goals for this session?
- What behaviors or skills are needed for that?
- What do you expect to do in this session?
- What actually happened?
- How long was the training session?
- Look for patterns or useful information
- Help in not over-training
- Also keep socialization trips, likes & dislikes, and any other pertinent information in the journal.
- Start teaching yes good no after the pup has been home 2-3 weeks.
Equipment
X-Pens:
- allow dogs to move around and have some freedom without getting into trouble, it teaches them to relax around us, allows us to live our lives doing laundry or cooking dinner, prevents them from going-after older or other dogs in the house, and allows them to be a part of the family-setting.
- ALWAYS SUPERVISE YOUR PUPPY IN AN X-PEN. They can get their paws or jaws caught and can cause permanent damage to the dog. Just google it if you don’t believe.
- A raised bed can be placed in an x-pen
- X-pens should be looked at as chill-out zones
- Upon introduction use treats to coax the puppy into the x-pen and keep feeding. It is best if the pup is already a little tired.
- If dog jumps against the walls, poke in the butt gently to coax down.
- Crates: Plastic is good for housebreaking, they are easy to clean if pup has an accident. Plastic creates a more isolated environment than wire crates. WIRE CRATES REQUIRE SUPERVISION so the pup doesn’t get her paws or jaws caught.
- Leashes without loops allow pups to drag them and become habituated without the risk of them getting caught on items.
- Other items to get are;
- long line leashes
- harnesses
- flat collar
- slip collar
- training treats & pouches
- foot targets both elevated and flat for advanced training
- Soft tug toys for puppy
- Rubber balls-you can put a hole through them and add string
- Self entertainment toys
- Treat-dispensing ball
- Experiment with other toys
- Used for when dog is left alone
- Kong toys
- Kuranada Beds should be used initially without bedding so the pup doesn’t chew it. Once the puppy understands the bed, you can add bedding.
Setting-up your House:
Have an outside area where dog can be free. Multiple crates and x-pens help a lot. Keep treats and toys everywhere. Put crate somewhere close to a door for potty breaks. Puppy-proof house. No cords or breakable figurines on tables, no poisons, check plants, rocks, etc.
- Be able to get puppy outside quickly for potty breaks. Position crates, beds, etc accordingly.
- One crate should be placed in a convenient place such as a TV room.
- A second crate in a quiet place is ideal for teaching the puppy isolation.
Redirection from bad actions to good activities
If dog picks up and starts chewing on something I don't want, redirect her with a chew toy or something that will get the dog's attention.
So, hold the item you want back, give dog the treat, she releases, I take item, and give dog the treat. Not that thing this thing.
If dog is biting my pant leg or teething my hands. Redirect their energy onto a toy. If dog starts barking at another dog in public, redirect her energy into something else. Ideally, be pre-emptive. if you see a dog coming, channel the dog's energy before she sees the dog, reward the dog for ignoring the dog. Puppies on a harness are more difficult to redirect.
Name Recognition
Say name and feed dog. Say name and feed dog. Fido...feed. Fido...feed, etc. Movement is interesting and motivating to dogs. We can feed a couple times before starting so puppy knows we have food.
After doing this a hundred times or so, take the dog into a distraction free environment and start walking with them. When the pup gets out in front of you or is just not paying attention to you, say her same, hopefully she will whip around and come to you looking for food. Back up quickly and give treat. The quicker my first step, the more contrast there is, the more motivating it is to the dog to come to me.
We want the dog to be a little focused on something else when we call her, if she is already focused on me, the drill is not as strong.
Next, we teach a physical signal. Dogs pay attention to physical signals more than verbal signals. Michael Ellis pokes the dog in the butt as a physical signal to come. The steps are to let the dog get out in front of you, poke their butt, say their name, dog spins around, I back up and feed dog. This way if the dog doesn’t come on the verbal command, you have a backup physical command as well.
From there, start adding distractions. Start with a friend walking their dog on a leash coming towards you, from a pretty far distance. You walk your dog towards them. When your dog sees the other dog, redirect them back into you using the verbal command. If she doesn’t listen, use the butt poke to bring her back.
Some dogs will be harder to redirect, so in real world situations, sometimes we just have to get ourselves out of the situation.
Be pre-emptive, the longer you wait to redirect the harder it becomes.
Self-Reinforcing Behaviors:
Are behaviors that value within itself, it has inherent value. Often these behaviors have a chemical reward in the brain; such as chasing, jumping, chewing, playing rough, barking, etc. These behaviors do not need to be rewarded by us for the dog to maintain them.
Many problems in dogs come from self-reinforcing-behaviors. For example, if your nervous dog gets to the end of their leash and starts barking at strange dogs, this become self-reinforcing. The nervous dog feels better when she barks, and also the embarrassed owner usually takes the dog away from the situation, so the dog is rewarded through barking and they have taken themselves out of the situation they didn’t want to be in.
So over time, they dog learns to deal with anxiety by barking and pulling. We do not want them to do this, so we prevent them from practicing these unwanted behaviors. If a dog starts to get interested in another dog, bring them back in and have them focus on me or something else. If dog is allowed to rehearse this behavior it can be much harder to break her of it than if I just prevented it from the beginning. Use redirections and pay attention to your environment.
If dog is not responding to your redirections, you need to keep the dog out of those situations until you have built enough motivation that you can redirect them.
Drills: See Name Recognition
#1: Say their name and feed it. Don’t have to mark, but can say yes
#2. Walking…say name and feed if dog comes to you
#3. Butt tap
#4. Add Distractions
Classical Conditioning: Pavlov’s dog. Bell dings, food gets dispensed, dogs ate. Dogs began to expect the food when they heard the bell and began to salivate.
- The bell (neutral stimuli) needs to occur before the reward. Will not work if the reward and neutral stimuli (bell) occur at the same time. Also won’t work if the neutral stimuli is present while the dog is eating.
- The dog needs to be able to predict what is going to happen.
- After time, the dog’s internal response to classical conditioning becomes involuntary. It is not a choice, but an involuntary response.
Operant Conditioning or Instrumental Learning—Operant Conditioning governs the associations dog makes with their behaviors and outcomes. They choose to do certain behaviors based on their previous experience with the outcome, this is the cause and effect part of dog-training.
Four quadrants are based on the combination of the words; positive, negative, reinforcement, punishment. There is no judgement, positive does not mean good and negative does not mean bad.
Positive means we are adding something to the equation,
negative means we remove something.
Reinforcement means the dog is more likely to perform the behavior in the future, and punishment means they are less likely to perform it in the future.
Four Quadrants of Operant Conditioning:
- Positive Reinforcement—Classical give your dog a reward when he sits. The food, the primary reinforcer is being added to the equation. The sitting behavior is more likely to happen in the future.
- Negative Reinforcement—Not a correction. The dog stops something unpleasant from happening with their behavior. Example, the old way of teaching the sit by pulling up on the dog’s collar until they sat is a form of negative reinforcement. The negative part is I remove the pulling on the leash and whatever behavior the dog did to make the unpleasantness stop is more likely to happen again in the future. The dog’s behavior that stops the discomfort is more likely to happen again.
- Positive Punishment—Traditional consequence, example my dog jumps and gets a knee, or my dog jumps on the counter and I yell no. The positive portion is me adding the yelling to the equation and the behavior is less likely to occur in the future.
- Negative Punishment—Withholding something from the dog. Example if I am luring my dog and she jumps, I remove the food. The negative portion is removing the food and the behavior that prompted the removal has been punished and is less likely to happen again in the future.
Holding and Delivering Food Rewards:
Hold food between middle finger and pointer finger at the second joint from the bottom. Then use the end of your thumb to support it, then cup your hand like you are trying to hold water.
I want the nose/mouth pushing against my hand before giving the dog the treat. When I want to give the dog the treat, I just roll my thumb away and let the dog have the treat.
Don’t cover food with thumb. Support from the side.
Don’t pinch food.
Don’t want dog trying to get to the food from the side, this is partially why placement is so important.
Communication System (2:58:30)
There is an entire DVD on this entitled, “the power of training dogs with markers”
There are three basic markers we use in classical conditioning: We are wanting to communicate to the dog when they are correct and when they are wrong.
- Yes-this releases the dog from the behavior
- Good-dog continues behavior, keep going, keep doing what you are doing.
- No-punishment marker. Remove something. Example, if dog jumps on me, I say “no” and take treats away, he sits, I say “yes” or “good” and reward.
Yes and Good should be trained in separate training sessions.
- We are using classical conditioning to condition our dogs to these markers.
- Timing of markers is crucial.
- We use these commands to communicate to dogs when they are right and wrong in teaching phases.
- Chasing the Marker:
- Yes = Dog comes to the reward
- Good = Deliver reward to the dog
- Over time the dog will learn to move when she hears “yes” and continue the behavior when she hears “good”.
Engagement Game that trains the markers:
- Get puppy taking food from your hand
- Say “yes” and take a take away from the puppy so she follows you, give treat
- Repeat
Good is done the same way, but trainer does not take a step away, trainer stays in place and continues to feed the dog; “good” then feed.
Your markers should sound different than the way you would say them in everyday conversation.
A clicker also works, but takes up a hand that is sometimes needed for other things, your voice doesn’t need to be carried or held. They have advantages such as always having the exact same sound; this is nice in case you are frustrated or angry, those emotions won’t come through in a clicker like they will from your voice.
Verbal markers need to sound the same each time, an angry “yes” sounds different than a happy “yes”. Our marker sounds need to have a special sound, one different than everyday speech.
With puppies, we can’t force this training. We have to adapt to their bio-rhythms and train when they have energy. Puppies 8-9 weeks old or so, will have peaks of highs and lows.
Chewing, biting, pulling behaviors 4-6 months
Small amounts of encouraging prey-based behavior during critical periods makes it much easier to play with the dog later on. If you neglect it, it is much more difficult.
Puppy Mouthing
...is normal. Don't discourage, instead redirect into something they can chew. Discouraging this behavior can have adverse affects later on when trying to teach the dog a skill that require the behavior you discouraged...bite work, retrieving, etc.
Teething 4-6 months
During teething, stop all tug behaviors and play. They can still play with tug toys, just don't pull. Dogs teeth can be very sensitive and we don't want to risk them having a bad experience. Bad experiences can damage motivation.
Puppy Games:
Recall Game with Treats: Throw a treat, dog goes after it, then we hold another treat and call the dog back, dog gets treat. Straight out and straight back to me.
Back up when dog is coming at you, incorporates chase and makes it easier for you to feed treat.
Grass doesn't work, must be a surface the dog can easily see the treat. This is not a scent-tracking game.
This game helps when training the retrieve for balls, toys, etc.
2nd Game: Food Chase--instead of throwing food, we run with the food in our hand. With food in our hand, we run away from the dog, our hand at the height of their nose. When they get to us, dog touches our hand and gets reward.
Then move in the other direction and repeat. This creates more interaction between us and the dog, which is engagement. It's important to move in a straight line, this allows the dog to trust in you, where the target is going to be, this makes it easier for your dog to predict where toys will be later on and will avoid bites.
Keep treats in both hands and have a treat pouch on you for fast reloads. Slightly larger pieces of food work better than smaller ones, but we don't want them so big it interferes with the flow of the game.
Food Throw Game
Engage puppy with a treat. Throw a treat out in front of the puppy, puppy goes and gets the treat, we start moving away from the pup and also simultaneously start calling for her with another treat in our hand, dog touches hand, dog gets treat. Repeat.
Food Chase Game
Always move in a straight predictable line for the dog. With treats in both hands and more on reserve, hold treat in one hand and hold hand like a runner ready to accept a baton, keep hand at dog's head height, run away from dog, dog touches hand, dog gets treat. Run in other direction in a straight line and repeat.
Teaching your dog to play is a process
Toy-based training doesn't start until dog is 9-12 months old. The dog needs to understand all the rules first before you can use toys formally.
Little puppies would have their play-drive destroyed if they were forced to learn all the rules right away.
With puppies, there are no rules, you can chase it, bite it, tug, yay you win! We want to encourage play impulses in puppies through games and play. We first create good play behavior then begin to add the rules over time.
Toy Play
Why Play? Play can be a reinforcement for behavior. It also exercises our dogs in an interactive way that builds our relationship with the dog. Also, we can teach the dog to listen to us in a highly-aroused state. Often dogs will listen when calm, but not when aroused. This helps.
Tug Play
Why would a dog want to bring something back if we are going to take it form her? Playing tug creates value. We can back-chain retrieving behavior using the reward of tugging. The dog likes to tug, so she wants to bring stuff back so she can play tug.
The younger the puppy the softer and easier to bite the item will have to be. Start tug-play with young puppies with a rag, fleece toy, car shami, etc. Its a good idea to put the toy on a string so the puppy doesn't go after your hand. Strings allow you to stay still while moving the toy. Puppies often focus on what is moving. We can also use the string to keep a little tension in the toy. You can simulate a live animal, move it, let it go still, move a little, etc. Some dogs will prefer tug or retrieving better, some like both.
Crate Game:
- Don’t leave any equipment such as a harness or collar on a dog when they are left alone in the crate. They can chew it off or injure themselves if the harness gets stuck on something.
- Crate Game #1: Throw treat into crate and let the pup go in and eat it. As the pup gets more comfortable with this game, you can begin restraining the pup a little in order to build motivation, then you can finally add a verbal command to get the pup to go into the crate.
- Hold dog back while she is facing the entrance to the crate
- Say the command
- Let go of dog
- Dog goes in and eats food
- Additional Step: When dog comes out of crate towards us, feed with one hand and with the other hand toss a treat into the kennel without the dog seeing. This way the dog doesn’t rely on you, the treats are already in the crate.
As the puppy gets better with this game, you can leave her in the crate longer and longer by tossing in more treats. Eventually start closing the door. Feed puppy when she is in the crate to promote the crate as a positive place. Let the pup settle-in and get comfortable before letting her out.
Puppies can chew on pig's ears, bully sticks, marrow bones, etc. Feed puppy a lot while in crate. Short durations, like 5 minutes at a time and then build on that. A little whining is ok, but a major tantrum is not helping and the dog should be let out. In this case you need to go wear-out the pup and start crate-training again. Different people should feed dog and let it out of the crate. DON'T just throw dog in the crate and wait the three or so days until the dog stops whining. The dog might stop whining but it won't be a place of peace for him, so introduce slowly and monitor. Make the crate a positive place for the dog.
Always take puppy out to go potty immediately after leaving crate, every time!
Introducing Puppy to other dogs:
Don’t allow dogs to run loose together in the home. Inside is for relaxation. Outside is for play and stimulation.
- Take both dogs on a walk away from the house on neutral territory.
- Let dogs walk alongside each other on leashes (pup using a harness) but don’t let them touch each other.
- Keep walking until they loose interest in each other.
- Then you can introduce them to each other
Upon introduction pay attention to the older dog’s body language, how is she responding? Adjust pup’s behavior based on how the older dog responds, If the older dog is stiff and uncomfortable, then the puppy needs to leave its space.
- Dogs need to meet in a neutral environment. Don't bring puppy into house to meet old dog. Ideally they should meet off property.
- Don't let dogs meet face-to-face or touching initially.
- When they do meet, read each dog’s body language.
- When loose and playing together outside make sure older dog isn't overwhelming younger dog and also that the younger dog isn't pestering the older dog, forcing a correction.
- No toys or anything one dog can guard on initial meeting.
- Older and younger dogs might need to be separated inside.
- Protected Contact: When two dogs can see and contact each other but have a protective barrier between them such as an x-pen. Puppy can be in pen and older dog out freely walking by or older dog can be in x-pen and you can practice walking the puppy alongside the older dog.
We want the dog to spend more time with us than the other dogs in the household. This insure they bond with us and prevents them from spending too much time with other dogs and picking up any of their bad behaviors.
Arousal Zones: (41:00)
- We want to compartmentalize energy and have areas of high and low energy output.
- The house is a low-energy output-zone.
- Outside is where we play, inside is where we relax.
- There should be no interactive play between dogs inside the house.
- Dogs shouldn't be allowed to play together inside or it will become a high arousal zone.
- Play happens outside. This is setting the stage for an on/off switch.
- We also want the puppy to bond with us more than the older dog, so the pup needs to spend one-on-one time with me.
Dog Food vs Training Treats:
Treats should be a reward, so there needs to be a contrast between the food the dog eats the the treats they are rewarded with. The treats need to taste better and be of a higher-value to the dog if we are to keep them interested. Dogs are less-likely to work for food if they are already getting it as a regular part of their normal diet.
- The treats should be a size that allows the dog to eat them easily and quickly. If they are too big, the dog takes too much time eating them and it interrupts the training flow.
- Happy Howie’s or Red Barn Training Rolls are great and can quickly be chopped into usable sizes using an onion chopper.
- Keep treats stashed all over the house for easy access. The more consistent you can be with your dog the quicker she will learn.
Management is all the things you do with our dog to live with them while they’re being trained and how we institute manners without damaging the dog’s motivation. We are setting ourselves up for success.
- If I am not directly interacting with the puppy she is in her crate with appropriate chew toys such as pig’s ears, bully sticks, marrow bones etc.
- Crate, even if leaving the room for 30 seconds. By not allowing the pup to get into trouble, you are setting her up for success.
- Pups can be loose as long as I am supervising.
Engagement:
Pre-teething puppies use food for engagement. Pup needs to be hungry to want treats. If pup isn’t interested in what you’re giving her, use something better.
Always have treats on you and reward your pup every time she comes to you. Never call your puppy unless you are sure they will come, otherwise you teach them it is ok to ignore the recall command. See Training the Recall DVD for more information.
Early stages of engagement should be done in a distraction-free environment.
Use contrast of movement to promote interest, but always move away. Dogs are intrigued by stuff happening, so if I stand still, then make a dramatic quick first step, the pup will be more likely to follow. If pup goes off to sniff, don’t run after it, get the pup to come to you. Otherwise, the pup will begin to think you are chasing them.
Initially we move to get the pup’s attention to making the dog make us move as part of the reward.
As the dog begins to focus on us more, and begins to look up at me, I mark yes, and then move and have puppy follow. Pup will become more engaged on me.
Handing a piece of food to a dog is less motivating than standing there saying yes and making a quick step and then rewarding. Just be sure to mark and reward when dog focuses on you, mark and move.
The reward event should be erratic, not predictable. Predictability kills focus with dogs. We want the dog to not know when the reward event is over.
If struggling with engagement, map out your puppies energy levels, often first thing in the morning and night pups have high levels of energy. Often afternoon is not a good time. Manage your dogs energy level regarding play and exercise. The more energy and hungrier the pup is the more they will respond to food and engagement drills. Training journal helps here.
Restrained Recalls:
First step in recall progression. This is how to teach the pup to come to their name. Restraint builds frustration. Frustration builds motivation to get to the handler. RR are a good way to start a training session with a puppy.
With young puppies start by just holding the front of their body for restrained recalls, but eventually we want to use harnesses. Don’t leave harnesses on dogs unattended.
In order to habituate the puppy to the harness, we should be doing food work while it is on, otherwise they will be too pre-occupied with the harness to do restrained recalls without habituation
Start by putting harness on dog and doing food work. Then progress to adding a leash and let the pup pull the leash around. We want to do RR with a harness and a leash attached.
It is a good idea to incorporate a few restrained recalls into an engagement session. Make sure pup is familiar with person holding her. Can use food treats to familiarize pup to a new person. Give pup treats when person holds them or start with simple touching.
When assistant is approaching the puppy to hold her, handler should be giving dogs treats to keep pup’s focus. Handler should dog’s attention as assistant approaches. Assistant should touch the pup, then handler rewards, touch…reward a couple times before assistant actually holds pup.
Keep feeding as assistant is holding. We don’t want the dog to become weird about someone holding her.
As soon as assistant is holding pup, handler backs up…calls for dog…assistant releases puppy…handler continues backing up as dog approaches…moving backwards, the handler marks yes and rewards…assistant comes to dog and handler.
We don’t want the pup and handler to have to move back to the assistant. Since we are practicing engagement at the end of a RR, we want the pup to stay focused on us, not on running back to the assistant.
- Have assistant hold pup,
- I run away,
- Call dog—this is where we add a verbal command
- Assistant releases,
- Dog runs to me,
- I mark yes and reward event
- Assistant comes to dog and handler and repeats or handler continues with engagement work.
Then when the dog is used to RR’s, we can pick up the leash and put tension it. Pull backwards lightly, and hold a treat in front of the dog’s face, make them pull their way into the treat. We wan the dog to know it is ok to pull on the harness. We are basically luring the dog. Mark yes and reward.
If puppy begins to spin as assistant is holding, the assistant can let the pup inch forward.
Call-Aways:
- An assistant lures the puppy away from the handler with a closed hand, does not give pup any food
- Handler moves in opposite direction and calls puppy away from assistant and treat
- Assistant closes hand
- Dog goes to handler
- Handler rewards
You can increase the difficulty by the assistant not closing hand and after teething, adding toys.
- These will be the focuses regarding recalls for the pup’s first six months or until they are done teething.
- Restrained Recalls are first step
- Then go to unrestrained recalls with just me
- Then we can do call aways with an assistant
Corrections: Dog needs to clearly understand why they are being punished and also need to clearly understand how to shut-off the correction with their behavior. The pup needs to have control over the correction. This will actually create less stress for the dog. Most aversive can be prevented through better preparation and planning. Puppies should redirected most of the time, too many corrections will damage our relationship and will create an unbalanced, fearful dog.