Motivational Dog Training – Criteria

My mentor, Jean Donaldson, taught me there are two parts to review when a dog is disinterested in training.  If it’s not motivation, then it’s criteria. What is criteria in dog training?  Criteria is the contract we have with the dog about the behavior he needs to perform to get the reinforcement. The level of difficulty of criteria increases as the dog matches his behavior to the current criteria we are looking for. For example, when teaching a down stay, {Read More}

Motivational Dog Training – Toys

Some dogs are highly motivated by toys. They’re born to play, and when you are blessed with a dog like this, you’ll have plenty of dog training time because the reward of play is always available. The flip side, however, is you have to give these dogs a lot to do, and do a lot with them, or they’ll be called destructive and uncontrollable when they use their energy for whatever makes them happy.  Case in point why I offer {Read More}

Motivating Dogs

I have an avocado tree that has started producing fruit.  For the last three years, in progression, two avocados in year one, several more in year two, and this year, a few more.  I had plans for sharing these fruit, until recently, a varmint stopped my plans in its tracks. The thing got not one, but two, of my precious reserve.  And they were not nearly ripe enough to get tasty after being in a paper bag for several days. {Read More}

Why Use Food For Dog Training?

Food is a motivator to every living being on the planet.  Without food, we would perish.  When the feeling of hunger strikes, it’s pretty hard to think of anything else but eating, especially as your stomach starts to growl. Having such a powerful motivator is almost like having a magic wand.  Food gets a dog’s attention.  Dogs focus when food is in the training game.  Food motivates.  Period.  This is cause to celebrate not complain!  Reinforcing behaviors with food makes {Read More}

Fort Lauderdale Cookie Trainer

Cookie training is a euphemism for dog training using food as motivation. That euphemism is most often used by force trainers, those using pain to train. Dog trainers who were running classes when I first started learning to train were unimpressed, and maybe even uneducated, about the power behind training with treats. Force was the dominant method of dog training then, literally and figuratively. But now there is a much better way to train dogs using two of the four {Read More}