Saturday, December 11, 2010

Constructive Dog Training Methods - Do Treats Work?

By Steven Jorgensenn


Numerous individuals supply their pet a treat as a reward for very good behavior or for obeying a order. Nevertheless, treats are not the most efficient method to train your dog, and can even trigger troubles.

Some people feel that the only kind of constructive training is with treats. Certainly, most basic commands might be taught with treats; even so, treats aren't really an successful way of improving behavior difficulties or encouraging compliance.

Dog training is based on consistency. Giving a treat when a dog demonstrates a negative conduct simply rewards that behavior and motivates the dog to do it once more. Similarly, if you give your dog a treat as a reward for positive behavior, your dog will expect to be given a treat every single time he behaves correctly, which can ultimately lead to problems.

There are many excellent reasons to steer clear of utilizing treats for training purposes:

* Treats do not aid with housebreaking. What goes in should come out. * Some dogs are overly energized by treats and are truly a lot more difficult to manage when food is involved. * Some dogs aren't food motivated at all. * Once a dog is full, he may possibly refuse to obey the command because he no longer cares about the reward. * Some dogs have food allergies. * Do you really wish to need to carry treats around with you all of the time to get your dog to obey?

A greater form of constructive training is 'praise' training, where the dog is lauded and loved when he does what we want. Rather than anticipating a treat, he is rewarded with praise and approval -- which is what most dogs really want from their owners. Praise and approval is also some thing you never exhaust!




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