With a 9 months and a half, 52kg Rottweiller, I'm struggling a bit. At home sit, paw, down all good. Outside, no way he listen or get out of focus from the target. He is so stubborn with jumping and barking at bicycle, especially the ones that arrive fast from our back ( deliveroo and JustEat never slow down). Feel a bit lost and stuck with training but, I need to fix this asap.
What you don't mention is that people like runners and cyclists also have a responsibility to avoid this behaviour occurring. I walk our harmless but energetic dog every day on a little used forest track, but in the holiday season there are many cyclists who come hurtling along it at a speed which endangers pedestrians and other users of the path. There are twists and turns and often you cannot hear them approaching. Many times I have jumped in the air with a scream as a cyclist whizzes right past me without any word of warning, no bell, no alarm. It is not surprising that my dog, seeing these madmen rushing past and this reaction in his owner is going to chase and bark at the culprit. The rules say, 'Give way to pedestrians' just as it says to off road motorists, 'Give way to cycles (and pedestrians). If a runner or cyclist simply stops or slows right down to pass someone or an animal off lead, there is no reaction and a friendly greeting like 'Good boy' will usually end any potential problem. It also allows the dog owner to put the dog on the lead until the danger is past. Too many runners and cyclists seem to think they own the track or footpath and make no efforts to slow down. I am not going to pressure my dog into a passive attitude when in one sense I agree with him that these other road users represent a danger not just to the dog, but to me, and other wild animals which might be crossing the track.
My dog jumps at cars runners scooters bikes... treats are of no interest to her outdoors... I have tried everything... she will observe them from easily 200m away... The problem is that those before mentioned are often irresponsible... they do not care if your pet is spooked or endangered.. therefore, the dog sees this as prey...
GREAT video! It helped me to train my toy poodle to chase everything (cars, runners, scooters, bicycles etc) what moves fast :))) THANK YOU
Thank you, great tutorial!
With a 9 months and a half, 52kg Rottweiller, I'm struggling a bit. At home sit, paw, down all good. Outside, no way he listen or get out of focus from the target. He is so stubborn with jumping and barking at bicycle, especially the ones that arrive fast from our back ( deliveroo and JustEat never slow down). Feel a bit lost and stuck with training but, I need to fix this asap.
What you don't mention is that people like runners and cyclists also have a responsibility to avoid this behaviour occurring. I walk our harmless but energetic dog every day on a little used forest track, but in the holiday season there are many cyclists who come hurtling along it at a speed which endangers pedestrians and other users of the path. There are twists and turns and often you cannot hear them approaching. Many times I have jumped in the air with a scream as a cyclist whizzes right past me without any word of warning, no bell, no alarm. It is not surprising that my dog, seeing these madmen rushing past and this reaction in his owner is going to chase and bark at the culprit. The rules say, 'Give way to pedestrians' just as it says to off road motorists, 'Give way to cycles (and pedestrians).
If a runner or cyclist simply stops or slows right down to pass someone or an animal off lead, there is no reaction and a friendly greeting like 'Good boy' will usually end any potential problem. It also allows the dog owner to put the dog on the lead until the danger is past. Too many runners and cyclists seem to think they own the track or footpath and make no efforts to slow down. I am not going to pressure my dog into a passive attitude when in one sense I agree with him that these other road users represent a danger not just to the dog, but to me, and other wild animals which might be crossing the track.
dude i agree with you on what you said , cyclist are responsible and so are runners , runners pst a danger cause dogs see them as prey
How to stop dog chasing vehicles. My dog chases bikes in road
Mine too? Did you ever figure this out?
@@okkaren6363 no ...
@@okkaren6363 just gave him treats while bikes are moving to distract him tats it... But sometimes he will chase still
@@daredevil7501 hi, how did you go with training your dog to not chase cars? Did this method work for you?
My dog jumps at cars runners scooters bikes... treats are of no interest to her outdoors... I have tried everything... she will observe them from easily 200m away... The problem is that those before mentioned are often irresponsible... they do not care if your pet is spooked or endangered.. therefore, the dog sees this as prey...
Good advice but Music is so annoying I couldn’t concentrate 😢
exactly , why couldnt they edit out that bull shit music??? they not enough brain to remove bull shit music
You‘re right the music is spoiling the video!
A cup of cold water at the dog's face, when the dog approaches cyclists, is known to work, according to Barbara Woodhouse.
its animal abuse
grow up - it's not hurting the dog in any way - @@ianfordogs
i agree with john on this , water often times discourages dog's even pro dog trainers say so
would you throw a cup of water at a childs face when they get scared of a big spider ? No? Why would you treat a dog that way, then?