I have our son’s out of control 8 month old German Shepherd with me while his wife recuperates from a C-section. Great video! I have 2 weeks to work with the dog and hope that I can turn her around. They can’t deal with the craziness any longer and want to rehome her. We will take her if I can be successful breaking her jumping, whining and constant barking. We already have two dogs and it’s a bit of a circus here but I think I am seeing improvement!
My 7 month old male Jack Russell is a humping and jumping dog. Tried popping his slip on leash without any success. Used your method in dog park today. Finally I can let him loose for the first time after corrected his annoying behaviour to other dogs or people. He played well with other dogs today.
well thank you very much. just recently i brought two 7 month old airedale terriers home. they are such jumpers that i'm black and blue. after watching your video i know exactly what to do about their jumping. i'm very grateful to you and a new subscriber.
Simply perfect. Now if only we could show this video to all those dog owners who think it's ok to have their dog jump up on you to say hi... Thanks guys, Australia is watching
If this works with my dog it will work with any dog. My dog gets so excited he jumps straight up off all four paws (like a bunny hop in a bike) about 3-4 feet in the air. This problem along with trying to sprint while you have him in the leash (he peels out in place when I hold him from running) are the 2 issues he has. Other than that Russell, our 3 year old jack Russell/ wheeler mix is a great dog. I’ll let you n ow do the self correction/ stand in the leash method does the trick.
Wow, awesome video - informative and straight to the point. My puppy is a big time jumper, I will DEFINITELY be trying this out next time someone comes over, thank you!
Ya. My buddies dog is an idiot hound. Every time i come over i step on the lead but the idiot will jump/correct a dozen times . . . Then keep trying to jump. Eventually, the pooch may settle down but as soon as my foot is off the lead she is back to jumping. I have many years experience with dogs and have been doing what you demonstrated for decades. For most dogs, this will work. Some dogs are just too dumb! Lol
I have a question. haven't you told us not to get them comfortable on a tight leash? I'm just wondering, because it seems like if he moves in any way he's running into a tight leash. Is this a special scenario where purposely keeping the leash tight is a good thing?
its NOT tight! He showed how much slack to leave, then the dog snaps himself when he jumps up. The leash instantly goes slack when the dog puts his front feet down. 👍
Ok my girl is huge & she’s 9 months Once I take the leash off she goes back to jumping Do I just put leash back on & she corrects herself again ? We are all girls here & this has to be one of the major issues please help
My problem is my little puppy runs at me full force and jumps on my leg..I have kneed her multi times and it makes her worse like she is playing a game. She is little now but will get much bigger and I need to get a handle on her jumping. I have tried to grab her collar before and she runs away from me in fast zooming circles...it is so frustrating. She is going on 5 months and I need to stop her from doing this.
Just tried this on my neighbors dog who loves to jump on me. I stepped on his leash, he jumped up correcting himself 4 times trying to get to me and YES no more craziness. Thank you Joel. Neighbor was amazed 💕
He looks like at least part Standard Poodle. Poodles are intelligent, but most of all responsive. They may look like doofuses because of their wiggly curly happy-go-luckiness, but I disagree. He got the correction in six jumps this session. My chihuahua/terrier took three days of this, very springy and stubborn, lol. Don't give up, Little Napoleon owners! Edit: Oh, and I have to use a harness due to not putting pressure on the trachea, so my little contortionist uses this to her advantage, haha.
I've got 15 month doodle. Trust me goofy goofy goofy. Smart as a whip. Athletic? Unbelievable speed and yes jumping ability. Its how she sees in tall grass. Like a deer.
I worry about that too with the trachea collapse cause my 8lb morkie runs on his hind legs. Our walks are very unpleasant and frustrating 😑. Trying ti be patient and watch these videos.
It's so cool at the end to see his paw keep going up for the jump but then stopping half way. His subcounsious mind wanting to jump was being over-ridden by the corrections he just got. So cool! Great work!
I taught our dog another way. I asked him to jump up on a specific hand command. I would use 5 other trick commands which would result in no treat and a head boop. He now double and triple checks that I'm asking him to jump up, he doesn't even trust the specific correct command on first request.
@@janeblogs324 Your last sentence shows why this is a problem. There are better ways. You want your dog to trust and immediately follow your command, not be scared he might be misunderstanding you.
That's because he thought he had something attached to him, as soon as he realizes the leash is off, he will continue to jump at home. This man is actually crazy
This was the method that worked for my very excited, jumping American Staffordshire Terrior. The treats never worked, he liked people more than any food. I could have them lay down a quartered cow and he would rather interact with people. Great method!
Years ago, we read a training book and it said to make the dog sit when you walk through the door and not greet him or touch him til he's sitting. Well, we tried that on our Pit puppy. It worked until he figured something out. One day, I walked in and he came to me in a sitting position from acrioss the room. It was interesting to say the least.
My juvie pup jumped on some random person yesterday. But she won’t jump on us. Maybe I need to try this “self correction” method so she doesn’t associate a correction with a certain person, but instead make jumping the correction itself. 😢😢
He would have just jumped on that other person. He associates the correction with Carlee, not the other guest. It takes time, patience and consistency for a dog not to jump when not corrected for jumping (on any particular person) first.
That’s me and my big spaz hyper doodle. Your training methods have brought so much love and enjoyment into our home. Of course it starts with being the boss and having the will to not put up with certain behaviors. Then by training myself to consistently apply your tools I am able to turn frustration into joy! Thanks!
@@mattm7798 Yes, repeat the exercise. Repetition, followed by reinforcement (in this scenario, getting pets), helps the dog learn how to greet appropriately and politely. I will add that if the dog is not responding to this exercise, stepping into them when they're jumping is an alternative, non-harmful technique that puts the dog off balance, which forces them to put their front feet back on the ground. Again, repetition and reinforcement of the desired behavior helps the dog learn to greet appropriately and politely.
I’ll try this! The knee method had no effect on my terrier-cross-gazelle.😂 She responded beautifully to your loose leash method though and is even (grudgingly) walking to heel. Unfortunately it’s had no effect on her reactivity but Thank you! You saved my sanity and stopped her being rehomed.
The knee method has worked fairly well for my Doberman-Bassett mix (please don't laugh, he's a real dog)...but he's starting to take it as play time, so this may be my next good option. He loves leash time, even though we have a huge fenced yard and he never needs to be leashed. I think as a rescue, he sees the leash as a sense of connection to his freedom from the pound?....anyway, you inspired some thoughts. Good day!
I have a pitbull that recently developed a dangerous new jumping behavior. He's started his own version of jumping up after we already addressed paw leading front on front jumping to greet us. He knows to come sit at our feet to greet people now. But recently it's evolved to a sneaky quick move that's injured me and a friend already. He's seated at our feet saying hi calmly but then as we are bent to praise and briefly pet to say hi since he's calmly seated he gets a random zoomie like moment and bracing himself against our legs and steadying himself with his back he springs up to get the excited jump greeting in... He hurt me and a friend of mine with his hard block head springing up and cracking each of our noses once and then once under my chin chipping my tooth. It's a serious and dangerous new problem and this video of yours is a perfectly timed gift. Thank you Joel!!!
GREAT JOB Bobby! I believe this to be an issue with most “doodles”. We have 2 berneDs and 1 GoldenD in our immediate family and they all have this issue. Our Doodle friends also complain of this. I’ll see 2 of them today, so I’ll give it a try. Thanks for the tip.
Lol my neighbor down the road has a dog identical to this one. It is an absolute maniac on the lead. It's some of the funniest dog walking I've ever seen. Alas, karma also has my dog being a spaz in many ways too. I've tried to stop laughing at the neighbor in hopes of rebalancing karma but no luck so far.
There is a reason for the aphorism karma is a *itch! Good luck with the rebalance! That you had a sense of humor about it should be appeasement enough!
I'm considering on buying an e collar for home training. My dog continues to jump on guests and i can't stop it. He won't do it to me but he will do it for new people. He's already too smart for the house leash or if I'm near. So the leash step on doesn't work because he knows better. Trying to train my guests is not effective either. He's like a bad kid that knows it's wrong only when I'm around basically. Lol will an e collar work? If so, what's the best method to do this the right way after getting them used to the e collar?
This is so great. This is one of the last pieces of the puzzle i was needing solved. Can't wait to be able to use this again. Especially when our homeschool nature group comes over and I am teaching some basics of dog training. Thank you! Really love your videos!
You have to give the dog credit though, he made some serious strides in a short amount of time. You can already see he tries to keep the 'goofballs' type of energy he has into a sit so he can get those sweet sweet pets! hahaha. Great video as always!
I will practice this a lot today. I should've be trained my GSD about this a long time ago.Everything else he teaches on his videos is effective and works, so today, I will practice this stop jumping technique too.Thank You very much again!
Joel love this video....all your training is Balanced with training Positive and Negative! This is why you are so successful!! By the way...Eddie Van Halen would love this video...JUMP correct JUMP correct JUMP correct...JUMP!
Thank you for the great demonstration. I have an 11 year old lab pit bull that I luckily never needed to use physical or loud verbal commands to correct his issue but I will share this with others. Keep up the great work.
You are simply amazing! I discovered your channel by chance and I am super impress with your methods. I previously owned two large breed dogs a Rottie and a Cane Corso , and I am proud to say I trained them myself and they were well behave dogs. It was a pleasure walking with them as they never got ahead of me and they were always by my side. Unfortunately, I had to put both down because they developed a nasty bone cancer that had no cure. It was very painful to put them to sleep, and now I am getting a Schnauzer and I am going to implement your training methods. Keep up the good work!!
My dog has the worst jumping issue on guests.. I definitely trying this.. she never jumps on me cause she jumped into my knee a few times and she learned.. my guests don't feel comfortable because it is not there dog.. so I am definitely trying this
I can't wait to try this with my 22-month-old rescue rednose (he can jump 5.5 feet even with only 1 good back leg!!) and his favorite neighbor!!! Will report back!!! 🐾❤️🐾❤️🐾❤️ So cute how much the pupper loved Carli & how proud she was of him when he stopped jumping🤗❤️🙏🏽🐾
My poodle is exactly like this, can't wait to try this technique. Poodles learn so fast, I think it will be an immediate transformation. Thank you for the technique 😊
THANK YOU!!!! I recently rented a room in a house with a jumper. The owner is blind to the behavior. I was hoping you would have a vid on this topic. AND HERE YOU ARE!!!
We were having a lot of problems with this, especially with people our dog loves. With this issue the jump has normally already happened and you have to deal with it afterwards. This prevents the behaviour entirely. Three self corrections later he had figured it out. Thank you.
I managed to fix his jumping back when he was around 4-5 months old but he started doing it again a couple of months ago after I was away for a couple days, I didn't think they could 'ruin' him in such a short time. It definitely doesn't help that what I work on gets crushed by my family letting him do whatever he wants, even after explaining them what it leads to. I guess I'll give this a try, but what if people just keep reinforcing his excitement, trying to jump an all that when I'm not there?
I absolutely love your methods! Trainer of 20yrs here. I've always used leash corrections at the door but recently tried this. One big challenge I ran into was a lab pup about 6mos immediately tried to go around the owner and kept tangling himself & the owner up. He had the appropriate amount of leash but just became a little contortionist 😋🐾. Is there a trick to work him through this?
Ok. But what do you do if the doj jumps on the guest again? After the corrections. This dog learned in one try. I don’t think mine will. So do I do it over again.? Like put the leash back on and step on it. And does the guest need to stay there and do this process for a long time, if the dog doesn’t learn right away? This was wonderful advice, and I can’t wait to try it. I’m just wondering if my guests will even want to bother? They are mostly just teenagers. My kids friends. Our GSD is a big time jumper, and he’s so excitable around other ppl, he can’t calm down. I guess it just takes repetition.
Unless it's a dog with not much drive he'll just figure out he can get away with it off leash. What will you do then? You'll do the correction you should've done in the first place.
Been trying to find a way to correct my little Jack Russell jumping on people, I think this is what I needed. Love all your door way and loose leash methods as well.
This method definitely works well with my 85lbs female doberman but I am curious should you allow the dog to smell peoples privates? Bobby actually does it twice inbetween all the attempted jumps on Carly. I know that my doberman does it to guest sometimes and if I am close by I can correct her but after she has calmed down and not jumping on guest she sometimes will casually walkup to our guest and put her face in their crotch to smell which freaks me out more than anything but I can also tell some of the guest don’t like it either. She doesn’t do it for more than 2-3 seconds but I wish she just didn’t do it to people and only other animals
That's how they say "Hi!", doncha know, haha. Non Dog Folks are not amused for some reason... It's one thing my little gal is too short for. If she does when you see, it's easier. Does she know, and have you tried the "Leave it" command, or equivalent? That's what I'm working on with smelling lovely piles of "Oh god what is that?!" outside.
Finally a video with a dog that is not already well behaved. Thanks!😅
I have our son’s out of control 8 month old German Shepherd with me while his wife recuperates from a C-section. Great video! I have 2 weeks to work with the dog and hope that I can turn her around. They can’t deal with the craziness any longer and want to rehome her. We will take her if I can be successful breaking her jumping, whining and constant barking. We already have two dogs and it’s a bit of a circus here but I think I am seeing improvement!
My 7 month old male Jack Russell is a humping and jumping dog. Tried popping his slip on leash without any success. Used your method in dog park today. Finally I can let him loose for the first time after corrected his annoying behaviour to other dogs or people. He played well with other dogs today.
That was impressive, man. I like your approach to training dog behavior.
Great quick correction method.
Also loved to finally learn what updog actually is.
well thank you very much. just recently i brought two 7 month old airedale terriers home. they are such jumpers that i'm black and blue. after watching your video i know exactly what to do about their jumping. i'm very grateful to you and a new subscriber.
This is great. I love simple answers like this. Thank you
Simply perfect. Now if only we could show this video to all those dog owners who think it's ok to have their dog jump up on you to say hi...
Thanks guys, Australia is watching
AMAZING!!!! i cant wait to try this technique when getting home!!!
The jump corrections were kinda hilarious ngl 😆
0:37 "Pretty good jump" Agree my friend, 10/10
Totally gonna try this with my crazy 4 month Bernedoodle!
Thank you! I will be training a jumper soon. Big dog like you did.
Dogs who have learned not to jump up are a pleasure to be around. Dogs which have not been so taught are a pain.
Dude thats so awesome that u showed that. Well I'll be doing that thanks
👈 can't wait to try this on my jumper Jack. Thank you 🇨🇦
I have always used the knee method, and I only need to do it a couple times.
That was awesome! I'm going to try that on both of my dogs. I'll report back if it works or not.
Amazing!
Super
Absolutely just…..wow wow wow
Thank you so much for this video.
I cross my arms and turn around..we have a standard poodle..
If this works with my dog it will work with any dog. My dog gets so excited he jumps straight up off all four paws (like a bunny hop in a bike) about 3-4 feet in the air. This problem along with trying to sprint while you have him in the leash (he peels out in place when I hold him from running) are the 2 issues he has. Other than that Russell, our 3 year old jack Russell/ wheeler mix is a great dog.
I’ll let you n ow do the self correction/ stand in the leash method does the trick.
Wow, awesome video - informative and straight to the point. My puppy is a big time jumper, I will DEFINITELY be trying this out next time someone comes over, thank you!
That was cool
Ya. My buddies dog is an idiot hound. Every time i come over i step on the lead but the idiot will jump/correct a dozen times . . . Then keep trying to jump. Eventually, the pooch may settle down but as soon as my foot is off the lead she is back to jumping. I have many years experience with dogs and have been doing what you demonstrated for decades. For most dogs, this will work. Some dogs are just too dumb! Lol
I have a question. haven't you told us not to get them comfortable on a tight leash? I'm just wondering, because it seems like if he moves in any way he's running into a tight leash. Is this a special scenario where purposely keeping the leash tight is a good thing?
its NOT tight! He showed how much slack to leave, then the dog snaps himself when he jumps up. The leash instantly goes slack when the dog puts his front feet down. 👍
Yeah the leash is loose when he's not jumping and gets a lot of praise and gets to greet the guest
What about 160 pound Great Dane? He can still take the heaviest person’s feet out from under them jumping up while stepping on the leash.
hmmmm neat video, one problem tho. what is up dog?😂😂😂
Ok my girl is huge & she’s 9 months
Once I take the leash off she goes back to jumping
Do I just put leash back on & she corrects herself again ?
We are all girls here & this has to be one of the major issues please help
What kind of dog is that?
My labradoodle is exactly this. Very jumpy, and not easy to make him sit still
Does this go for biting too. !???
How do I do this with a pastor dog weighing over 95 pounds?
How do I train my six month puppy to sit stay walk in a leash without going crazy Juming I've tried everything need help please
My problem is my little puppy runs at me full force and jumps on my leg..I have kneed her multi times and it makes her worse like she is playing a game. She is little now but will get much bigger and I need to get a handle on her jumping. I have tried to grab her collar before and she runs away from me in fast zooming circles...it is so frustrating. She is going on 5 months and I need to stop her from doing this.
do you have a video on how to stop dogs from chasing cats?
That's my dog and is one of those too. He is jumps exactly like that dog. And I am thinking of rehoming him😢
Just tried this on my neighbors dog who loves to jump on me. I stepped on his leash, he jumped up correcting himself 4 times trying to get to me and YES no more craziness. Thank you Joel. Neighbor was amazed 💕
Lol
I misunderstood the video and stepped on the dog - it also worked
@@elburto5387 lol good joke line:)
And what if there's no leash?????
@@elburto5387😂
This dog is the exact definition of a doofus. And even a doofus can learn! Love it.
He looks like at least part Standard Poodle. Poodles are intelligent, but most of all responsive. They may look like doofuses because of their wiggly curly happy-go-luckiness, but I disagree. He got the correction in six jumps this session. My chihuahua/terrier took three days of this, very springy and stubborn, lol. Don't give up, Little Napoleon owners!
Edit: Oh, and I have to use a harness due to not putting pressure on the trachea, so my little contortionist uses this to her advantage, haha.
Classic doodle; smart and quick to learn but all round goofballs wanting to play and make friends.
I've got 15 month doodle. Trust me goofy goofy goofy. Smart as a whip. Athletic? Unbelievable speed and yes jumping ability. Its how she sees in tall grass. Like a deer.
I worry about that too with the trachea collapse cause my 8lb morkie runs on his hind legs. Our walks are very unpleasant and frustrating 😑. Trying ti be patient and watch these videos.
It's so cool at the end to see his paw keep going up for the jump but then stopping half way. His subcounsious mind wanting to jump was being over-ridden by the corrections he just got. So cool! Great work!
yeah, you can literally see him going for it and self-correcting right away. amazing stuff
I taught our dog another way. I asked him to jump up on a specific hand command. I would use 5 other trick commands which would result in no treat and a head boop. He now double and triple checks that I'm asking him to jump up, he doesn't even trust the specific correct command on first request.
@@janeblogs324 Your last sentence shows why this is a problem. There are better ways. You want your dog to trust and immediately follow your command, not be scared he might be misunderstanding you.
That's because he thought he had something attached to him, as soon as he realizes the leash is off, he will continue to jump at home. This man is actually crazy
When the dog tried to jump a bunch😂 “jump correct jump correct jump correct jump correct” had me dying 😂 this is great! Thanks for the advice!
😂😂😂😂 that was great. Made me smile 😃
😂😂😂
My golden doodle goes insane with jumping just like this one. I will definitely give this method a try!
This was the method that worked for my very excited, jumping American Staffordshire Terrior. The treats never worked, he liked people more than any food. I could have them lay down a quartered cow and he would rather interact with people. Great method!
😂❤
Years ago, we read a training book and it said to make the dog sit when you walk through the door and not greet him or touch him til he's sitting. Well, we tried that on our Pit puppy. It worked until he figured something out. One day, I walked in and he came to me in a sitting position from acrioss the room. It was interesting to say the least.
Had to laugh at this one. We have a smart dog and She tries(and sometimes succeeds) to out smart me. 🤣🐾💗🐾
Getting someone new to walk in after he was no longer jumping on her would be a better indicator of change, I think. A good indicator, at least.
Yes, random doorbell/person, off leash is the final test if this will translate. That is the goal I want.
My juvie pup jumped on some random person yesterday. But she won’t jump on us. Maybe I need to try this “self correction” method so she doesn’t associate a correction with a certain person, but instead make jumping the correction itself. 😢😢
He would have just jumped on that other person. He associates the correction with Carlee, not the other guest. It takes time, patience and consistency for a dog not to jump when not corrected for jumping (on any particular person) first.
You have to keep working with them. They are like toddlers - lots of repetition.
😅"Jump. Correct." Wild, I love it. So simple.
Love this. Short, succinct, highly educational. Perfect.
That’s me and my big spaz hyper doodle. Your training methods have brought so much love and enjoyment into our home. Of course it starts with being the boss and having the will to not put up with certain behaviors. Then by training myself to consistently apply your tools I am able to turn frustration into joy! Thanks!
It's not about being the boss, it's about leadership and the relationship between you and your dog
Whoever owns Bobby should never ever get a dog ever again. Your dog jumps on people so you considered getting rid of the dog!?!
I use this technique quite often with stubborn jumpers. It's a great method, and it really does help the dog learn that jumping equals nothing. :)
Question...once you take the leash off and they try jumping again, what do you do? Put the leash back on and repeat?
@@mattm7798 Yes, repeat the exercise. Repetition, followed by reinforcement (in this scenario, getting pets), helps the dog learn how to greet appropriately and politely. I will add that if the dog is not responding to this exercise, stepping into them when they're jumping is an alternative, non-harmful technique that puts the dog off balance, which forces them to put their front feet back on the ground. Again, repetition and reinforcement of the desired behavior helps the dog learn to greet appropriately and politely.
Ok, I will work on it, have an aggressive cane corso..
Love your direct, no nonsense techniques, that actually WORK, thanks again!
I’ll try this! The knee method had no effect on my terrier-cross-gazelle.😂 She responded beautifully to your loose leash method though and is even (grudgingly) walking to heel. Unfortunately it’s had no effect on her reactivity but Thank you! You saved my sanity and stopped her being rehomed.
The knee method has worked fairly well for my Doberman-Bassett mix (please don't laugh, he's a real dog)...but he's starting to take it as play time, so this may be my next good option. He loves leash time, even though we have a huge fenced yard and he never needs to be leashed. I think as a rescue, he sees the leash as a sense of connection to his freedom from the pound?....anyway, you inspired some thoughts. Good day!
I have a pitbull that recently developed a dangerous new jumping behavior.
He's started his own version of jumping up after we already addressed paw leading front on front jumping to greet us. He knows to come sit at our feet to greet people now.
But recently it's evolved to a sneaky quick move that's injured me and a friend already.
He's seated at our feet saying hi calmly but then as we are bent to praise and briefly pet to say hi since he's calmly seated he gets a random zoomie like moment and bracing himself against our legs and steadying himself with his back he springs up to get the excited jump greeting in... He hurt me and a friend of mine with his hard block head springing up and cracking each of our noses once and then once under my chin chipping my tooth. It's a serious and dangerous new problem and this video of yours is a perfectly timed gift. Thank you Joel!!!
hes going to eat you
Watch his body language and energy.
Just because he LOOKS calm it doesn't mean he is.
Nothing, what's up with you?
GREAT JOB Bobby! I believe this to be an issue with most “doodles”. We have 2 berneDs and 1 GoldenD in our immediate family and they all have this issue. Our Doodle friends also complain of this. I’ll see 2 of them today, so I’ll give it a try. Thanks for the tip.
Our little cavoodle Connie was notorious for doing this, just an energetic puppy wanting to make friends. It's all just a matter of learning better.
I have a bernedoodle my self and it has become a major problem. I think it is the poodle in them. Nothing I have tried has worked.
Lol my neighbor down the road has a dog identical to this one. It is an absolute maniac on the lead. It's some of the funniest dog walking I've ever seen.
Alas, karma also has my dog being a spaz in many ways too. I've tried to stop laughing at the neighbor in hopes of rebalancing karma but no luck so far.
There is a reason for the aphorism karma is a *itch! Good luck with the rebalance! That you had a sense of humor about it should be appeasement enough!
Going to trying this method on my Cockapoo Pablo whois 11 months old and jumps a lot especially when children visit me
Thats brilliant train Hope it works for me
I'm considering on buying an e collar for home training. My dog continues to jump on guests and i can't stop it. He won't do it to me but he will do it for new people. He's already too smart for the house leash or if I'm near. So the leash step on doesn't work because he knows better. Trying to train my guests is not effective either. He's like a bad kid that knows it's wrong only when I'm around basically. Lol will an e collar work? If so, what's the best method to do this the right way after getting them used to the e collar?
What is "up dog"? never heard of it rofl
Nothing much, how about you?
0:39. UFO'S..... up, up, up......in the window!
Yay! Just started this a minute ago with our German Shepherd..will do it again. Glad I am doing the right approach
This is so great. This is one of the last pieces of the puzzle i was needing solved. Can't wait to be able to use this again. Especially when our homeschool nature group comes over and I am teaching some basics of dog training. Thank you! Really love your videos!
Well shown Joel 👍👍👍 80% of my clients are excited doodles
Same here...bouncy doodles are everywhere!! 😋🐾
a new Beckmans dropped and YT is just now telling me !? Shame on you UA-cam.
How much do all dogs love Carly. She’s great
You have to give the dog credit though, he made some serious strides in a short amount of time. You can already see he tries to keep the 'goofballs' type of energy he has into a sit so he can get those sweet sweet pets! hahaha. Great video as always!
So many problems arise from owners either not using a leash at all, or using it incorrectly.
I'm dog sitting a precious jumper. Thank you for this video. I would love to have him trained before his momma gets back from military training. ❤
Lmao! I love it! When the dog finally relaxes enough to sit you can reward with freedom. Perfect!
Watching videos of untrained dog owners and their badly behaved dogs keeps me from getting one.
I will practice this a lot today. I should've be trained my GSD about this a long time ago.Everything else he teaches on his videos is effective and works, so today, I will practice this stop jumping technique too.Thank You very much again!
This worked amazingly well while on a walk and greeting a neighbor ❤
u guys havent seen my luna, he could jump vertical out of randomness
Joel love this video....all your training is Balanced with training Positive and Negative! This is why you are so successful!! By the way...Eddie Van Halen would love this video...JUMP correct JUMP correct JUMP correct...JUMP!
Thank you for the great demonstration. I have an 11 year old lab pit bull that I luckily never needed to use physical or loud verbal commands to correct his issue but I will share this with others. Keep up the great work.
0:43 I fuckin geeked 😭😭😭😭😭😭
You are simply amazing! I discovered your channel by chance and I am super impress with your methods. I previously owned two large breed dogs a Rottie and a Cane Corso , and I am proud to say I trained them myself and they were well behave dogs. It was a pleasure walking with them as they never got ahead of me and they were always by my side. Unfortunately, I had to put both down because they developed a nasty bone cancer that had no cure. It was very painful to put them to sleep, and now I am getting a Schnauzer and I am going to implement your training methods. Keep up the good work!!
How do you stop them jumping up windows and doors like he was doing in the video?
Ill try this and get back to you 💕 Thank you
This dog is so stinkin cute!!! I am such a sucker and love my sister's cockapoo! I need more training than the dog! 🤣😇🥰
My dog has the worst jumping issue on guests.. I definitely trying this.. she never jumps on me cause she jumped into my knee a few times and she learned.. my guests don't feel comfortable because it is not there dog.. so I am definitely trying this
I can't wait to try this with my 22-month-old rescue rednose (he can jump 5.5 feet even with only 1 good back leg!!) and his favorite neighbor!!! Will report back!!! 🐾❤️🐾❤️🐾❤️ So cute how much the pupper loved Carli & how proud she was of him when he stopped jumping🤗❤️🙏🏽🐾
Jumping is usually one of the easiest behaviors to correct.
Thanks for the video Joel!😊
My poodle is exactly like this, can't wait to try this technique. Poodles learn so fast, I think it will be an immediate transformation. Thank you for the technique 😊
Holy cow, and those doodles are genetically bred to jump! lol
I tried this on my Rottweiler and she pulled me over😀
what type of collar do you need for this? Can you use a prong?
Normal buckle collar is best
THANK YOU!!!! I recently rented a room in a house with a jumper. The owner is blind to the behavior. I was hoping you would have a vid on this topic. AND HERE YOU ARE!!!
We were having a lot of problems with this, especially with people our dog loves. With this issue the jump has normally already happened and you have to deal with it afterwards. This prevents the behaviour entirely.
Three self corrections later he had figured it out.
Thank you.
I managed to fix his jumping back when he was around 4-5 months old but he started doing it again a couple of months ago after I was away for a couple days, I didn't think they could 'ruin' him in such a short time.
It definitely doesn't help that what I work on gets crushed by my family letting him do whatever he wants, even after explaining them what it leads to. I guess I'll give this a try, but what if people just keep reinforcing his excitement, trying to jump an all that when I'm not there?
I like this better than any of the videos I've watched
I absolutely love your methods! Trainer of 20yrs here. I've always used leash corrections at the door but recently tried this. One big challenge I ran into was a lab pup about 6mos immediately tried to go around the owner and kept tangling himself & the owner up. He had the appropriate amount of leash but just became a little contortionist 😋🐾. Is there a trick to work him through this?
Ok. But what do you do if the doj jumps on the guest again? After the corrections. This dog learned in one try. I don’t think mine will. So do I do it over again.? Like put the leash back on and step on it. And does the guest need to stay there and do this process for a long time, if the dog doesn’t learn right away? This was wonderful advice, and I can’t wait to try it. I’m just wondering if my guests will even want to bother? They are mostly just teenagers. My kids friends. Our GSD is a big time jumper, and he’s so excitable around other ppl, he can’t calm down. I guess it just takes repetition.
my puppy responds to your commands when im watching your vids haha
The "updog" setup! lol
What's up dog?
Unless it's a dog with not much drive he'll just figure out he can get away with it off leash. What will you do then?
You'll do the correction you should've done in the first place.
Best advice on stopping this behavior I have ever seen!
Been trying to find a way to correct my little Jack Russell jumping on people, I think this is what I needed. Love all your door way and loose leash methods as well.
This method definitely works well with my 85lbs female doberman but I am curious should you allow the dog to smell peoples privates? Bobby actually does it twice inbetween all the attempted jumps on Carly. I know that my doberman does it to guest sometimes and if I am close by I can correct her but after she has calmed down and not jumping on guest she sometimes will casually walkup to our guest and put her face in their crotch to smell which freaks me out more than anything but I can also tell some of the guest don’t like it either. She doesn’t do it for more than 2-3 seconds but I wish she just didn’t do it to people and only other animals
That's how they say "Hi!", doncha know, haha. Non Dog Folks are not amused for some reason... It's one thing my little gal is too short for. If she does when you see, it's easier. Does she know, and have you tried the "Leave it" command, or equivalent? That's what I'm working on with smelling lovely piles of "Oh god what is that?!" outside.