Teaching the Heel
By Sandra Fikes
Tradition says a dog heels on the owner's left
side.....that's from long standing field work, but unless you are interested
in obedience competitions, you can have the dog on whichever suits you.
If your puppy is not leash-broke, just put the
lead on him and follow him around the yard. Then get a pocket full of goodies
and show the treat to him and let him follow you around awhile......There!
That's what lead training is and you are on your way to teaching the HEEL.
I don't think it's necessary that the dog be in
a sit position to start the heel exercise. Just have him on the side you
have decided on and call his name ( We always call the name to get his
attention.) and give him the command "Heel". Start off straight ahead,
encouraging him with the treat and your happiest voice. Go about 10 or
15 steps, straight ahead, then stop and praise, praise, Praise! Do a couple
of heels in a straight line and add stops. In obedience competitions the
dog is required to automatically sit when you stop, so if you like that
idea, then ask your puppy to sit when you stop. The puppy should be doing
sits fairly consistently before you try it from the moving heel exercise.
Once you and the puppy are moving together with
the puppy by your side and not charging ahead or hanging behind you, get
out those treats and encourage him to go left or right with you. As in
any exercise, one thing builds on the other. Prime yourself for success
by mastering one part before starting the next.
As you gain experience, you can add more turns,
circles, go around objects like trees, lawn furniture and give a more realistic
nature to your training. Also add all those other commands you've learned......instead
of a sit, ask the puppy to down. While you're heeling, stop, have the puppy
to sit and tell him to stay. Step in front of him, count to 30, return
around behind him and praise. Just like us, dogs get bored, too! Vary your
exercises so neither of you will get bored. Young puppies have short attention
spans, so make your sessions short - say 10 or 15 minutes at a time. Better
to have two short sessions a day than one long one.
These articles are written by Sandra Fikes
of
Kalahari Rhodesian Ridgebacks
KalahariRR@webtv.net |