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When
Should I Start Training My Puppy?
Simply put, the
sooner you begin training your puppy the
better – for both of you. But
you have to understand the stages a puppy
goes through as he matures so you can form
some realistic expectations of his
behavior and learning ability. (Click
here to see my article on the “7
Stages of Puppy Development for additional
in-depth information on this subject.)
While some
early training can be started as soon as
you bring your puppy home,
the optimum time to begin obedience
training is somewhere around 9
to 12 weeks of age. Keep in mind that
training can cover a broad range of topics
– I’m not suggesting that you begin
training your puppy at 8 weeks of age for
agility competitions! Your training
should start off with the basics –
teaching him “No!” and beginning
house-training.
Socialization skills are next –
experts tell us the best window for your
puppy to learn socialization skills is
between
3 and 16 weeks – that’s the best time
to insure that your puppy grows into a
well-adjusted adult. And
remember, socialization isn’t about
teaching him the right fork to use at the
dinner table – it’s about giving your dog
the self-assurance to deal correctly with
any social environment he finds himself in
is one of the most valuable and lasting
lessons you can teach him.
A
well-socialized dog will interact well
with all types of people and situations,
even those he has never been in before.
With appropriate social skills, your dog
will show little or no fear of most
objects, people or other animals, and even
if startled, will recover quickly and
won’t panic.
Bottom
line,
a well-adjusted dog is one that is
comfortable in a variety of situations and
surroundings. He may be excited in a new
setting, but not fearful. The key here is
to create positive experiences as you
expose your dog to more and more new
situations.
Even
training your puppy for 5 – 10 minutes per
day as soon as you bring him home will
make a big difference in the social
skills and adaptability of your puppy.
Keep in mind that puppies have very short
attention spans, so keep your lessons
short and fun. How short an attention
span? That depends on the age of the
puppy, his breed and how mature your
individual puppy is – but a good rule of
thumb is to keep the training sessions
within that 5 -10 minute range.
Depending
on your puppy’s age and maturity level,
sometime between 3 and 6 months of age
you should be moving the training into the
area of the basic commands such
as Sit, Heel, Down, etc. It’s important
you have realistic expectations
about your dog’s capabilities at this
point – I don’t expect a puppy to be
responding to the basic commands with any
degree of regularity until they’ve reached
6 months of age.
Puppy
training (well, all dog training
for that matter) has three main components
-
known as “PCP”.
No, I’m not talking about
drugging your dog! (Shame on you for even
thinking that!) PCP (in this case) stands
for the three things you need to keep in
mind day in and day out when you’re
training your dog:
1.
Patience
2.
Consistency
3.
Practice
Patience
is the key to any training program
with your puppy. The level of patience
you display while training your dog will
have a direct impact on whether you
have a happy, well-trained dog, or a
miserable, misbehaving one.
You’re the adult here, remember? You’re
the trainer, the leader of your pack, and
the one doing the teaching. You know that
your puppy needs short and positive
training sessions. You know you can’t
teach him everything in one session, or
even in a week of sessions. So patience
is the key. If you find yourself getting
frustrated when training your puppy, end
the session on a positive note, and stop
the training. Don’t lose your temper and
take it out on your dog. It’s not his
fault you’re getting annoyed – ok, well,
maybe it is, but it’s up to you to
maintain control and restart the training
on another day.
Consistency
is the second most important component of
training. I’ve already talked about how
important it is for everyone in the family
to give your dog the same commands and
allow the same behaviors. I can’t stress
this point enough. If your family is all
on the same page in terms of training,
your puppy will be trained more quickly
and thoroughly than you can imagine.
Everyone in the household needs to use the
same commands. That way, when someone says
“Sit” to your dog, he knows it means
“Sit.” Not “Lie Down,” not “Ok, go eat
your food now,” not “It’s ok to chase the
cat.” Sit means Sit. Down means Down.
And it’s equally important to keep the
behaviors consistent. You can’t have one
family member letting your dog get on the
couch and another trying to discipline him
and telling him “No!” for the same
behavior. It will only confuse him, with
the end result that he won’t learn
which behavior is right. So he’ll
either try to do both, or neither. And
either one of those actions will simply
get him in trouble with whatever family
member happens to be present at the time.
Practice
makes perfect. I really hate to use that
old adage, but it’s true!
Repetition is the way to teach your dog a
lesson – any lesson. Repeating the
lesson over and over again will engrain it
so deeply in your dog’s memory it’s likely
he’ll never forget it, and that’s what you
want. You want his reaction to your
commands to become second nature, obeyed
almost instinctively and certainly
followed immediately – it literally could
be the difference between life and death
for your dog.
Any
successful training program must
include some sort of discipline.
Having said that let me say this:
don’t ever hit your puppy. Let
me repeat that so there’s no mistake.
Don’t ever hit your puppy!
In order
to apply discipline for an inappropriate
act, you must
1.
Catch your
puppy in the act of misbehaving, or
2.
Take steps
to avoid the misbehavior in the first
place.
If you
walk into the living room and find your
puppy squatting to piddle on the carpet,
you should tell him “No!” in a loud and
sharp tone of voice, then walk over, pick
him up and take him outside. (Or leash him
up and take him outside.) Either way, your
puppy can tell he’s done something you
don’t want him to do. There is absolutely
no need to hit your puppy, just because
he’s doing what comes naturally to him.
And, truth
be told, if you had been paying
attention to your puppy, you would have
recognized the signals he was using to
tell you he needed to go outside. So the
fault for this particular situation needs
to be laid at your door, not
your puppy’s. You could have avoided the
situation in the first place by being more
attuned to your puppy’s needs.
So, start
early, be consistent, be patient, practice
– and before you know it, you’ll have a
dog that’s a joy to have around!
And if you
want to start today . . . just
click here to check out my
book “Dog Training Secrets!” |