@@The_Anti_Dog_TrainerI love her too. She's one of a kind, you're so lucky. Best mentality a dog could have. My Akita is very similar minus the playfulness.
Pertinent topic for moi. Thanks for post showing progress is being made. Rewiring behavior NEEDS repetition, and better to coach the owner during the process, both dog and owner need to find what works. Dog needs to learn to listen to EACH owner separately: trainer's observations are helpful re keeping proper distance emotionally, observing resistance from dog, and how to direct dog's attention. Owner showed progress: it can be overwhelming when the dog is so hyped up and not listening, and a real victory to experience how being more calm helps the dog. Dog's behavior was calmer and more playful at end of session.
@@shawnrisley2404 Hell yeah!! I love your comment on this! Thank you for simply observing what took place and making objective comments on the process. I love it! Thank you for watching and giving this valuable feedback!
@@shawnrisley2404 I hope this 5 part series can help you with your particular issues, and if not, please commet and ask for additional information if necessary
@@tashashouse That's great if the dog will listen. In this case the dog knows many commands however he is so over excited and anxious that commands do not work until he is calm. He is totally dismissive of the owners direction. My goal is never to distract the dog but rather to instill a boundary until the dog relaxes enough to respect the boundary and listen to the direction the owner is giving
@@BIGBEN9999999 You accomplished absolutely nothing with this comment. Where is your catalog of dogs and happy clients? Your page is empty. A whole lot of assumptions you made based on absolutely nothing.
@@The_Anti_Dog_TrainerWich clients are you talking about? never said I was a trainer. (And putting a catalog of dogs and clients on a youtube page would be necessary because...?). Over 20 years working with my own dogs and in a shelter, I'm still following courses and looking to learn. That's why I watched this clip. What I learned here: an owner forcing her dog down for 17 minutes getting even less connection than before , after which he's finally allowed to play with your dog - something he was already calm enough to do after 5 minutes tops. My assumptions are based on what I see in this video. But okay, let's be positive: great work! keep on going!!
@BIGBEN9999999 You claim you wanted to be positive yet you started the conversation by insulting me and my client. Having your own dogs and working in a shelter doesn't mean you have any understanding of the social hardwiring of the canine species or how that translates to a dog / human relationship. What would a catalog of your own prove? Well, would you go to the doctor's office and tell him how to cure cancer? Likely not unless you had a doctorate of your own.
Doesn't seem like the dog is learning anything other than that his owner is really annoying. Also, why do you have your dog off-leash when Cooper is clearly not ready for that?
@@GoldenWolf248 This is not a learning based exercise. This has everything to do with relationship roles and power dynamics. The owner is not being annoying, she is gaining control over Cooper because his state of mind is such that is not able to be influenced properly. He is essentially taking a leadership role with this encounter and the goal is to re establish the roles properly so that he respects the owner as well as any dog he is around. My dog is off leash for the purpose of getting Cooper to react so that his owner can step in and address him accordingly. It's irrelevant whether he's "ready" for it or not as he is completely dismissing his owner in an attempt to get to the dog.
@GoldenWolf248 I do not consider conditioning I these situations for the same reason you wouldn't consider conditioning when building a relationship with your child. It's all about relationship dynamics and power dynamics with dogs. Skinner and his kin have no place here.
@GoldenWolf248 sure, but no animal on the planet is actually conscious of it. There are many layers to any social interaction, not just conditioning. It would be like using one ingredient to bake a cake.
Little GreyGoose is so cute bouncing around 😂
I know right!! She's literally the best!
@@The_Anti_Dog_TrainerI love her too. She's one of a kind, you're so lucky. Best mentality a dog could have. My Akita is very similar minus the playfulness.
@@loyal_dogs I agree and I am very lucky to have found her. It sounds like your Akita is great too!
Pertinent topic for moi. Thanks for post showing progress is being made. Rewiring behavior NEEDS repetition, and better to coach the owner during the process, both dog and owner need to find what works. Dog needs to learn to listen to EACH owner separately: trainer's observations are helpful re keeping proper distance emotionally, observing resistance from dog, and how to direct dog's attention. Owner showed progress: it can be overwhelming when the dog is so hyped up and not listening, and a real victory to experience how being more calm helps the dog. Dog's behavior was calmer and more playful at end of session.
@@shawnrisley2404 Hell yeah!! I love your comment on this! Thank you for simply observing what took place and making objective comments on the process. I love it! Thank you for watching and giving this valuable feedback!
@@shawnrisley2404 I hope this 5 part series can help you with your particular issues, and if not, please commet and ask for additional information if necessary
I have a German Shepherd that needs this same kind of training. I don't know where to go in my area or what kind of trainer to look for.
I teach "See me" to distract dog.
@@tashashouse That's great if the dog will listen. In this case the dog knows many commands however he is so over excited and anxious that commands do not work until he is calm. He is totally dismissive of the owners direction.
My goal is never to distract the dog but rather to instill a boundary until the dog relaxes enough to respect the boundary and listen to the direction the owner is giving
Sometimes pressure is necessary.
@@tashashouse I absolutely agree! It's a matter to what degree, when, and what type. Dogs apply pressure to each other.
Ignorant owner + awful trainer => zero results. Indeed, you accomplished absolutely nothing. Hopefully this lady isn't charged for this nonsense.
@@BIGBEN9999999 You accomplished absolutely nothing with this comment. Where is your catalog of dogs and happy clients? Your page is empty.
A whole lot of assumptions you made based on absolutely nothing.
And I'm not a trainer...read my channel description.
@@The_Anti_Dog_Trainer Okay, you're an "anti-dog-trainer" who "educates dog owners"... so a dogcoach, than?
@@The_Anti_Dog_TrainerWich clients are you talking about? never said I was a trainer. (And putting a catalog of dogs and clients on a youtube page would be necessary because...?). Over 20 years working with my own dogs and in a shelter, I'm still following courses and looking to learn. That's why I watched this clip.
What I learned here: an owner forcing her dog down for 17 minutes getting even less connection than before , after which he's finally allowed to play with your dog - something he was already calm enough to do after 5 minutes tops.
My assumptions are based on what I see in this video.
But okay, let's be positive: great work! keep on going!!
@BIGBEN9999999 You claim you wanted to be positive yet you started the conversation by insulting me and my client. Having your own dogs and working in a shelter doesn't mean you have any understanding of the social hardwiring of the canine species or how that translates to a dog / human relationship.
What would a catalog of your own prove? Well, would you go to the doctor's office and tell him how to cure cancer? Likely not unless you had a doctorate of your own.
Doesn't seem like the dog is learning anything other than that his owner is really annoying. Also, why do you have your dog off-leash when Cooper is clearly not ready for that?
@@GoldenWolf248 This is not a learning based exercise. This has everything to do with relationship roles and power dynamics. The owner is not being annoying, she is gaining control over Cooper because his state of mind is such that is not able to be influenced properly. He is essentially taking a leadership role with this encounter and the goal is to re establish the roles properly so that he respects the owner as well as any dog he is around.
My dog is off leash for the purpose of getting Cooper to react so that his owner can step in and address him accordingly. It's irrelevant whether he's "ready" for it or not as he is completely dismissing his owner in an attempt to get to the dog.
@@The_Anti_Dog_Trainer Have you considered the effects of classical conditioning?
@GoldenWolf248 I do not consider conditioning I these situations for the same reason you wouldn't consider conditioning when building a relationship with your child. It's all about relationship dynamics and power dynamics with dogs. Skinner and his kin have no place here.
@@The_Anti_Dog_Trainer Conditioning is happening all the time with any creature that has a brain whether you like it or not.
@GoldenWolf248 sure, but no animal on the planet is actually conscious of it. There are many layers to any social interaction, not just conditioning. It would be like using one ingredient to bake a cake.