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Training Your Puppy to Watch You

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This puppy training behavior is used to get your puppy’s attention back on you. I always work one to two repetitions of this behavior whenever I start a training session with a puppy. It is a great way to get your puppy to focus on you and concentrate on what we are about to work on.

The easiest way to teach a puppy “watch me” is to show your puppy you have a treat and then hold it right next to your eye. The puppy will follow the treat up to your face and stare at the treat. Don’t ask the puppy to sit or lie down first; how the puppy is positioned isn’t important. While the puppy is staring at the treat, watch closely for his eyes to flicker to your eyes and look directly at them.

It may be for the briefest of moments at first but be ready to say “good!” when you see it happen and give them the treat as soon as possible after you verbally praise. The better your timing is on praising and rewarding, the faster the behavior will come.

Once your puppy is focusing on your face consistently when you ask, try proofing the puppy a little bit by moving the treat further out to the side of your head or even hold it with your arm stretched out to the side and see if your puppy will look away from the treat and focus on your face.

It is a much more obvious way to see that your puppy is truly watching you and not the treat. Continue to praise and reward occasionally throughout the puppy’s life when they give you attention in especially demanding or distracting environments.

Possible Problems:

If your puppy isn’t focusing on you when you show them the treat and put it up to your eye, it could be one of two things. Either your puppy is in too distracting an environment for the skill level it is at or your treats aren’t exciting enough to keep his interest on you instead of the distractions. In both situations, try adding distance between you and the distractions and work the behavior again. Adding distance always helps the puppy be more successful.

Once your puppy is readily watching you when you ask in the low level distraction area, then slowly move closer to the distractions and practice “watch me” again there.  It is important that you have treats that will really attract your puppy’s attention.

Don’t use boring milk bones during training that your puppy may get every day; try cheese or hot dogs or liver. The more stinky the treat, the more successful you will be with your puppy training


 

 
 
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Carrie
Carrie
March 04, 2009
66.25.85.154
Votes: +0
Re: Treats

Andrew,
I am happy to see that your dog will work for carrots and milk bones. Yes, those treats I suggested are very high powered treats and in an environment like your house, you may not need to give those treats when training. I highly recommend, however, that you do bring treats like cheese, hot dogs, chicken, etc. when you begin to train behaviors in distracting environments like your front yard, parks, obedience classes, Petsmart, etc. In these environments, your dog is more likely to blow off training for whatever exciting thing they may see like other dogs or children. The high powered treats give you some arsenal and a leg up to make yourself exciting.
As far as size, I recommend bite size treats, like the size of a raisin. If the puppy is small, I will often give them only half of that raisin sized treat per repetition. My dogs are 40 and 50 lbs and in one training session with one dog, I use no more than a fourth of a hot dog. I usually cut the turkey dog in half length wise and then cut both of those halves into small slivers. With a puppy, I would probably give her a couple of pieces and then see over the next 24 hours how she does. If she gets sick, then you know that particular treat is too rich.
Also, using soft treats will work better for you than hard treats because if they crunch down on the treat and crumbs go on the floor then you will have to wait for your puppy to pick up the crumbs before you can work another repetition of the behavior you're training.
Whatever small amount of these high powered treats you can use, the better. They only need a taste, definitely not an entire hot dog per training session!
Hope this helps, exact amounts are hard to define when it comes to treats, just everything in moderation!

adolzani
Andrew
March 04, 2009
198.180.131.16
Votes: +0
how much is too much when comes to treats?

Our puppy is only 11 weeks (about 12-15 lbs) and I have taught her to sit and stay so far which has come in handy as we have two cats in the house... I just stumbled across your website today and some of the practices look really promising. smilies/smiley.gif

My main concern is feeding her too many treats, and the type of treats... so far I have been using carrots since she likes them (go figure) and simple milk bones but no more then three small milk bones a day and that has been breaking them up and giving them too her in little pieces during training. And then I was worried about over feeding them to her…

You say to give the dog Cheeses, hot dogs... and I’m sure she will be much more attentive with those but how much should we give her before we run the risk of making her stomach upset, and or diarrhea?

Any suggestions would be appreciated.

Thank you,
Andrew

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