omg how is she so good?! I just (less than a week ago) adopted an estimated 5 month old puppy from San Francisco Animal Care and Control. They said she was a "Belgian Malinois Mix," but she's brindle with a shorter snout, so she looks like a Dutch Shepherd. She only knows "sit." She can't even loose leash walk and she's not potty trained. She's such a handful, but she gets incrementally better every day. My blessing is that she hasn't destroyed anything in my house yet. Her rebellious acting-out behavior (from separation anxiety) is to sit on my bed (because I have never allowed her up on my bed. I cuddle her inside her playpen to try to prepare her for crate training).
Remember for a new dog it takes 3 days of feeling overwhelmed and nervous, 3 weeks of settling in and 3 months of building trust and bonding with you, the dog you see in the shelter will not be the dog you see once this 3/3/3 period is over. In March of 2023, I adopted a 14 m/o female Belgian Malinois who had been adopted twice, returned twice for biting and then a dog fight. The fear biting was due to the new person thinking it was a good idea to force a human interaction without allowing a clear escape route for which the dog can use to retreat. The dog fight was from an improper introduction to the resident dog, the second family did not remove all the toys and meat bones from the house and a fight resulted over both dogs wanting one bone. Both examples were from handler stupidity, yet the dog is blamed and suffers when gross missteps are made by humans. I know this is long, but I tried to shorten it. Once home I found Maxine had no recall or training whatsoever, she was unsocialized to most environmental objects and stimuli. On leash she was highly reactive and fearful of everything, likely due to no socialization as a puppy, she aggressively barked, lunged at cars, inanimate objects of all shapes, sizes and people. I was committed to Maxine's welfare and protecting her from herself and possible euthanasia due to more bites. I am guessing her behavior worsened as she got older and larger until she was far too hard to handle and was surrendered to the shelter as so many are. I immediately started on engagement exercises, name/verbal/whistle recall, then basic obedience and muzzle training. We focused on important exercises that would keep her and others safe while I addressed her severe reactivity. Corrections were hard but fair, with clear and concise communication. Arousal was a major contributing factor in her aggression which included redirecting on me during times of frustration or high arousal. Verbal, toy and food praise was paid jackpot style on success, we ended training sessions on a success. Our training sessions were brief but many throughout the day. Human interactions caused a state of high arousal, so humans became neutral and interactions off limit, hurt feelings resulted, I didn't want her to rehearse more nipping or biting. Cesar's "no talk, no touch, no eye contact" philosophy brought success. Maxine has a solid recall and will recall off prey species, I don't know if I can ever trust her off leash as she will at times load on cats, birds, small prey animals and sometimes unknown people. She has amazing food and ball drive with an excellent off switch for indoors. Family and friends are slowly introduced in a muzzle with strict protocol instructions as she gets bitey/nippy/mouthy when excited. Recently a friend couldn't believe Maxine was the same dog from a year ago, allowing me to take a minute to appreciate and celebrate her progress. Overall, the road ahead is long but filled with optimism. We're now training for her French Ring Brevet, btw I'm 62 & disabled. Good luck with your new pup!!
Bella is on a variable interval reward schedule at this point of her training. She has worked up to 15 minutes without a reward at this point but we reward her somewhere between the 3 minute and 12 minute time frame. This allows us to gain better obedience control over Bella's behavior. Her current reward is verbal and physical praise as well as a release at the end of an exercise. Bella is home and doing great with her family, she very happy to work for her owners.
I’m woken up with a big padded paw to the face and a sniff in the ear and a lick on the cheek and these big puppy eyes that are like hey buddy, you up...
Well ....I’v Had Dobermanns for 47 years and this guy has taught me a new Trick! Replaced my command from Down and then up ....To Down and then sit... ...Never to old to learn! .....Smart Bitch by the way , excellent video
I have a 9 1/2 week old her size. 24 lbs just yesterday. lol either he's just one that grows quickly or there's also a tiny bit of something else showing through via size. We'll see what happens! Currently enjoying watching the uneven ears getting a little higher each week.😁
@@sebg2086 hmmm.. ya i really wonder if they're using it, or if its just a bark collar, or if its just on to make comfortable for later. Does seem kind of odd at that age.
All dogs require training. Especially the working breeds. Dutch Shepherds and Malinois are near to impossible to live with, without training. Once trained, they are the best and most loyal dogs you could own.
first of all, it's not an shock collar. It's an e collar, 2 complete different things. A shock collar is to hurt the dog, an e collar is just to give the dog an little stimulation that's barely felt, just so she knows she's doing a good job or not. You should do some research first.
@@sickboyosc2744 why not? if you plan on doing work with the dog it's a good thing to start it early. And if you use it properly there will be no pain, it's just like snapping the leash. It's annoying.
Is that an e-collar?? I have a 5month gsd . I’m thinking he needs an e-collar as well . He is such a strong willed dog. At this point I need something to assist me when he chooses to not obey a command
yes it is, and e collars are great, they work really well on most dogs. You should watch: ua-cam.com/video/XG6OjwgXI54/v-deo.html and some other videos from him.
The E-collar is not a magic tool used to correct dogs. It can and should be used in both positive and negative reinforcement. We use very low levels of stimulation. It is an excellent tool when applied correctly. when used incorrectly, you can seriously damage your relationship with your dog.
Training with force (e collar, prong collar anything aversive) this early is just making a robot. You need to build character at this young age, behaviours are easy to teach, congratulations on training a robotic animal, there is no heart and soul here coming from the dog.
This is by far the dumbest comment ever. Obviously you’ve never trained a dog before. I’m currently training my 4-1/2 month old dutchie with a gentle leader and soon moving to a prong collar and finalizing with an e-collar to make sure she’s respectful and obedient as she matures. With all that she’s still the most playful and loving puppy even with kids and strangers. But you have fun training your goldfish because you’re def not training dogs
Beautiful pup and so intelligent too. When I am able to spend time with one I will get one
What a great looking dog.. & she crazy about her handler. Just the way she looks to you is so attentive.
omg how is she so good?! I just (less than a week ago) adopted an estimated 5 month old puppy from San Francisco Animal Care and Control. They said she was a "Belgian Malinois Mix," but she's brindle with a shorter snout, so she looks like a Dutch Shepherd. She only knows "sit." She can't even loose leash walk and she's not potty trained. She's such a handful, but she gets incrementally better every day. My blessing is that she hasn't destroyed anything in my house yet. Her rebellious acting-out behavior (from separation anxiety) is to sit on my bed (because I have never allowed her up on my bed. I cuddle her inside her playpen to try to prepare her for crate training).
Remember for a new dog it takes 3 days of feeling overwhelmed and nervous, 3 weeks of settling in and 3 months of building trust and bonding with you, the dog you see in the shelter will not be the dog you see once this 3/3/3 period is over.
In March of 2023, I adopted a 14 m/o female Belgian Malinois who had been adopted twice, returned twice for biting and then a dog fight. The fear biting was due to the new person thinking it was a good idea to force a human interaction without allowing a clear escape route for which the dog can use to retreat. The dog fight was from an improper introduction to the resident dog, the second family did not remove all the toys and meat bones from the house and a fight resulted over both dogs wanting one bone. Both examples were from handler stupidity, yet the dog is blamed and suffers when gross missteps are made by humans.
I know this is long, but I tried to shorten it.
Once home I found Maxine had no recall or training whatsoever, she was unsocialized to most environmental objects and stimuli. On leash she was highly reactive and fearful of everything, likely due to no socialization as a puppy, she aggressively barked, lunged at cars, inanimate objects of all shapes, sizes and people. I was committed to Maxine's welfare and protecting her from herself and possible euthanasia due to more bites. I am guessing her behavior worsened as she got older and larger until she was far too hard to handle and was surrendered to the shelter as so many are.
I immediately started on engagement exercises, name/verbal/whistle recall, then basic obedience and muzzle training. We focused on important exercises that would keep her and others safe while I addressed her severe reactivity. Corrections were hard but fair, with clear and concise communication. Arousal was a major contributing factor in her aggression which included redirecting on me during times of frustration or high arousal. Verbal, toy and food praise was paid jackpot style on success, we ended training sessions on a success. Our training sessions were brief but many throughout the day.
Human interactions caused a state of high arousal, so humans became neutral and interactions off limit, hurt feelings resulted, I didn't want her to rehearse more nipping or biting. Cesar's "no talk, no touch, no eye contact" philosophy brought success.
Maxine has a solid recall and will recall off prey species, I don't know if I can ever trust her off leash as she will at times load on cats, birds, small prey animals and sometimes unknown people. She has amazing food and ball drive with an excellent off switch for indoors. Family and friends are slowly introduced in a muzzle with strict protocol instructions as she gets bitey/nippy/mouthy when excited.
Recently a friend couldn't believe Maxine was the same dog from a year ago, allowing me to take a minute to appreciate and celebrate her progress. Overall, the road ahead is long but filled with optimism. We're now training for her French Ring Brevet, btw I'm 62 & disabled. Good luck with your new pup!!
That dog is gorgeous
Excellent work with that beautiful Dutchie!
I do hope she received a reward after all that hard work for a pup and some loving🤔🤔
Bella is on a variable interval reward schedule at this point of her training. She has worked up to 15 minutes without a reward at this point but we reward her somewhere between the 3 minute and 12 minute time frame. This allows us to gain better obedience control over Bella's behavior. Her current reward is verbal and physical praise as well as a release at the end of an exercise. Bella is home and doing great with her family, she very happy to work for her owners.
I should also mention that she is being continuously rewarded with verbal praise throughout the video.
I’m woken up with a big padded paw to the face and a sniff in the ear and a lick on the cheek and these big puppy eyes that are like hey buddy, you up...
I love those dark almost black brindles, they are sooo eye catching ❤❤😎. Would love to see what she looks like now
That's a good girl. My malinois just turned 1 year and she's not as disciplined as Bella. Good job.
Great relationship she definitely has trust and a bond with you
Shes a beauty.
Sharp adorable pup!
Stunning dog.
Well ....I’v Had Dobermanns for 47 years and this guy has taught me a new Trick! Replaced my command from Down and then up ....To Down and then sit... ...Never to old to learn! .....Smart Bitch by the way , excellent video
Where is this breeder from I'm interested in a pup
That's pretty good for 5 months.
A Beauty!
Super puppy
I have a 9 1/2 week old her size. 24 lbs just yesterday. lol either he's just one that grows quickly or there's also a tiny bit of something else showing through via size. We'll see what happens! Currently enjoying watching the uneven ears getting a little higher each week.😁
noo this is definitely possible, my 7 month old male is already the size of a previous full grown female. some just grow quicker and get bigger
Beautiful 😍
Thank you! 😊
👏👏👏Умница!!! 🙌🙌🙌 ☺️🤗💖
This is amazing! Really makes 99% of American dog owners look like real dog crap for how they treat and train their dogs.
Every dog owner I know treat their dogs Luke their children. Complete with training
Ubbidisce alla comanda, 👁🐕💜💙💚🐾🐾🐕
Wooow this is impressvie 😍 How did you train her so well?
They are really easy to train.
You are so kind
e-collar....
@@sebg2086 hmmm.. ya i really wonder if they're using it, or if its just a bark collar, or if its just on to make comfortable for later. Does seem kind of odd at that age.
Give that pup a treat already!
офигенная порода собак у нас в России таких нет 😭
Mine is 11 years old.
Page collar?
e collatr at 5 months?
What’s that round the collar with the red light
Not sure if it’s a shock collar
E-Collar, not a shock collar
I would love just to get my Dutch Shepard to just to sit he’s 8 months and doesn’t listen to me
You shouldn't have bought a working dog in the first place.
All dogs require training. Especially the working breeds. Dutch Shepherds and Malinois are near to impossible to live with, without training. Once trained, they are the best and most loyal dogs you could own.
@@malinataylor9184 he means the command sit
@@ryancurry7669 yes, I know, but if you are unable to teach a basic sit, then you should not have bought a high drive working breed.
@@malinataylor9184 oh gotcha
Are you really a trainer if you feel the need to put a E-collar on a 5 month old?
Hey man, did you watch the video? Cause that dog is pretty fucking well trained.
@@newnickfb you are wrong.
@@newnickfb Take that collar off the dog, we'll see how "pretty fucking well trained" it is.
5-month-old dogs don't need e-collars/prong collars.
@@Candle-m5swanna see ur stuff
E collars are tools stop crying hv u ever even felt one
I have a gs and he doesn’t listen this well and he’s 1yr
All dogs need training. no different from children.
Where can I get one of these do u have a contact
www.k9one.com
😉🥰🐾🐾🐕🍯
5 months and already has a shock collar, damn lmao
first of all, it's not an shock collar. It's an e collar, 2 complete different things. A shock collar is to hurt the dog, an e collar is just to give the dog an little stimulation that's barely felt, just so she knows she's doing a good job or not. You should do some research first.
@@TickyTacky don’t care 💀😂still no need for that collar when she’s that young
@@sickboyosc2744 why not? if you plan on doing work with the dog it's a good thing to start it early. And if you use it properly there will be no pain, it's just like snapping the leash. It's annoying.
Is that an e-collar?? I have a 5month gsd . I’m thinking he needs an e-collar as well . He is such a strong willed dog. At this point I need something to assist me when he chooses to not obey a command
yes it is, and e collars are great, they work really well on most dogs. You should watch: ua-cam.com/video/XG6OjwgXI54/v-deo.html
and some other videos from him.
E collars are only to be used once a solid foundation of obedience is already in place. They don't magically fix or train anything.
The E-collar is not a magic tool used to correct dogs. It can and should be used in both positive and negative reinforcement. We use very low levels of stimulation. It is an excellent tool when applied correctly. when used incorrectly, you can seriously damage your relationship with your dog.
All dog-trainer wanabees use electric-collars or is it just you?
Precio que país es lla. Ame
Training with force (e collar, prong collar anything aversive) this early is just making a robot. You need to build character at this young age, behaviours are easy to teach, congratulations on training a robotic animal, there is no heart and soul here coming from the dog.
Price pliz
You could not be more wrong or confused about training and behavior. Feel free to post a link to any amazing dogs you have trained.
This is by far the dumbest comment ever. Obviously you’ve never trained a dog before. I’m currently training my 4-1/2 month old dutchie with a gentle leader and soon moving to a prong collar and finalizing with an e-collar to make sure she’s respectful and obedient as she matures. With all that she’s still the most playful and loving puppy even with kids and strangers. But you have fun training your goldfish because you’re def not training dogs