Posts Tagged ‘Obedience Video’
An Obedience Video Can Give Hope To Frustrated Dog Owners
The story is one that occurs countless times in homes all across the world. The new puppy has just destroyed your reading glasses, or dug up your favorite rose bush, or jumped on you and got your Sunday best all dirty. Having a disobedient dog is no fun for anyone, and yet so many people simply tolerate and accept that the problems they are dealing with are just part of owning a dog. People have been turning to a book, a dog obedience training video, group classes, sending their dog off to get trained and even hiring a dog trainer to come out to the house to try to help them deal with the downsides of their doggy. If you are in that same boat, I will try and do you the favor of going over these options for you. Read the rest of this entry »
Obedience Video – Best Option For Most Dog Owners
An obedience video is not the first thing that comes to mind when one thinks about dog training. It certainly is not the most traditional approach. But just because it may not be the oldest or most known method for training your dog, does not mean that it is a bad choice for you and your dog. An obedience video offers many of the advantages of the best styles of training, and without a lot of the disadvantages that each different approach has. Read the rest of this entry »
Dog Obedience Training – How To
This article is brought to you by Obedience Video
Dog obedience training is a way for owner and dog to learn to speak with each other successfully. Contrary to public opinion, obedience training is not some method by which a dog learns to perform some necessary but artificial activity on command. Basic obedience training is a great way to establish a solid relationship with your companion.
Nearly all behaviour problems are perfectly normal canine activities that occur at the wrong time or place or are directed at the wrong thing. The capacity to learn basic obedience and even complicated behaviour is inherent in all dogs. Training is most effective when dogs or cats are rewarded for the good or desirable things they do while being ignored, redirected or corrected for showing unwanted behaviour.
