This is exactly what our 5 month old Aussie has been needing. Nothing else works. Thank you for adding additional methods to try. Our puppy is anything but typical and most training standards do not work for her. Luckily we have these great videos and a wonderful local trainer we are working with. Keep up the great alternative training videos!
I have trained my dog not to jump on me. The problem is that she gets overly excited around other people, especially when they are walking there dogs. Any ideas? I can teach my guests how to handle that, but out in public at the dog park off lead or walking on lead on trails is the problem. Thanks.
Definitely gonna do this with my puppy. She thinks that any attention, good or bad, is so fun 😅 And shes food motivated so i think this will work great for her
Also Coal is gorgeous, I have 6 standard poodles of my own, and three have been rehomed to me due to lack of training or behavior issues that I’ve corrected. Jumping digging chewing things up and door dashing have been main issues and all due to lack of structured training.
This was really good, as we can always expect from Carol. The best line was 100% "I didn't do a very good job there". Carol recognised the foot leash slip, how that had caused Khol to make a mistake. She's got the awareness to know the dog is having a problem and not being a problem. Want to be a trainer of the level headedness of Carol when I'm older :P
I tried this with my 3 month old pup. She gets it but I’m a way it makes her more excited that I’m giving her treats as she sits. I almost feel as if I’m rewarding the jumping behavior. I know timing is key, but she doesn’t seem to get it as she continues to jump up and hold her stance by using her paws to grab around my legs. And the jumping up on furniture is a whole new issue. I’ve watched all your videos on how to stop jumping and none seem to work due to her over excitement
Jump training should come with all standard poodle owner manuals! As a professional groomer I think this breed is number one for this bad habit. Doodles too.
I have a seven month old standard poodle. That looks just like Cole. And he acts just like Cole… Jumping pulling he’s absolutely joyful but wild. I’m hoping to get this behavior changed.
I know this isn’t the video to ask this, but my 6 month old sort of potty trained pup can hold her bladder over night and whenever she’s in her kennel, but when she’s out, she has to go every 30 minutes to an hour and no more than that. She goes to the door to tell me, but has an accident if I don’t get to her in time. I’m not even sure if they’re accidents anymore. Also, even if she went potty ten minutes before going in her kennel, when she comes out, she has to go again or she’ll go potty in the house. I’ve been tracking her water for awhile to make sure she’s not drinking too much, and I thought that over time she’d grow out of it, but my eight month old boy can last for hours and has since we got my girl. She’s been this way since we got her and the vet said that she was perfectly heathy. My dad wants to get a shock collar, but I don’t want to. If I can’t figure this out soon, he’ll force me to use one. What do I do and how do I train her out of this?
Hi! I read your comment and at one time my female pup had a similar situation where I noticed she needed to go out way more often and she would squat a couple of time each time she went out which was out of the ordinary for her. When I did a little research I came upon urinary tract infections and sure enough when we took her to the vet she had one! It was easily treated with antibiotics. I know you mentioned taking her to the vet so it’s just a suggestion! Good luck with your baby girl. I hope you can figure this out!!
I can get my 6 month old to stop immediately in the house and on the lead and when returning on recall. How do I stop her jumping up on others when she's outside off the lead?
Without a lead on and 100% success on not jumping this is VERY difficult. I would suggest keeping the lead on outside until you have 100% success. Also check out this video! ua-cam.com/video/bY-jOdWIQq8/v-deo.html Happy Training! ~Dan
Is their anyway Ms.Carol could make a video for a VERY hyper Catahoula Mix with a woman who is pregnant coming inside her own house ? Or how to stop my dog when coming home with a newborn in a carrier or having a newborn around ? I'm so concerned my girl Ruby will possibly jump up and hurt me or my soon to be newborn coming this June... I hope this made some sense but I'm just very worried about myself and my new baby plus Ruby. I want us all to be happy and comfortable in our home and to not stress coming home and getting jumped all over especially super pregnant and/or with a newborn. If by chance a video can't be made can you send me some type of link to a video or great site that can help me ? Thank you guys & have a wonderful 2023 !
Hi, I have an 8 month old golden. He is leashed to a wall 24/7 outside. 😕(he has access to a portion of the lanai, so he has shelter during the rain.) He rarely gets to go to the garden and play. His leash is about 3-4 meters long. I feel so bad but whenever we release him he goes CRAZY. (Jumps on people, bites, etc.) Right after releasing him, he always jumps on me and bites my hand to get his leash. It is understandable though since it's normal for him to do that as he's leashed most of the time. My fault. One time, he escaped from his leash and he destroyed some of my dad's plants. My dad has anger issues and he WOULD give him away if he knew that. I want to make a change, but i don't know where to start. I want to train him so my parents will finally allow him to free roam around the house 24/7. I want to give him a better life. do you have any tips? He also has a high energy level. he always pulls on the leash, too.
Aly, I'm worried about you and your pup. I take it you are not in the US, right? If I could put you in contact with a well known trainer in the US, would you mind that? You have a lot more issues that can be handled with one question. Do you want and are you willing to put the time into training him?
@@User7688.--_ Yes, im currently not in the US right now. I've tried telling my mom to find a trainer, but she doesn’t want to get one because of the risks of the virus. And yes, I'm willing to do whatever it takes to train him so he doesn’t spend the rest of his life locked up.
Aly, so you spend a lot of time with him? Do you take him for walks. How old are you? I am going to talk with my son who is a very good dog trainer in the US.
@@User7688.--_ Yes, I spend time with him. Although I don’t take him on walks. My helper is usually the one who lets him go potty. My dad sometimes plays with him at night. I don't wanna reveal my age here so let's just say im 10-15. He is pretty big already so he can easily pull me with his leash. But almost every Sunday, my uncle comes to our house and plays with him for about 30 mins to 2 hrs. One time, my cousins came over along with my uncle and they let him free roam outside for 4-5 hours and somehow he still wasn't tired 😅 My parents would allow him to free roam OUTSIDE 24/7 if he wasn't so naughty. We have a lot of plants so it's pretty risky.
Aly, you don't have to reveal anything, okay. That makes me happy that people play with him. What about a trainer coming over to your house, and you and your helper could be six feet away from them and teach you and your helper how to work with him while training him. Are you ambulatory? Even if you are not, you could absolutely be taught how to work, keep him and keep him trained when he is with you. A trainer can train him and show you how to stop him from digging. I'm afraid that if he is continually tied up the older he gets, you may have a way bigger behavior problem than what you have now that no one may be able to fix. Does that make sense? Does he get bones and things to chew on?
My issue is my dog doesn’t, or rarely ever, jumps on me but jumps on my husband and visitors. She does this when she’s excited or if I stand to close and talk to them. She’s definitely protective of me.
is jumping up a standard poodle thing?! i have a 7 month old standard and he is the jumping king! he can leap super high! his immediate reaction when he gets excited is to jump, especially when meeting new people. ive tried ignoring the jumping and rewarding calm behavior but he just doesn’t seem to get it that way. trying to nip it in the bud while hes still a puppy.
What if yr dog is training in search and rescue and the indication is jump? I do I teach her to jump only on me in training but not to jump at all when not training; is that even possible?
I'm disabled and I can't stand for to long and my 8 month old is a wolfhound cross. I can't stand on his lead he is to strong. I need a sit down method.
But u don't have the ekahs on all the time. Eventually it has to be off. Some dogs learn that too and know the difference. Then what do u do if he does it when it's off or learns the dif and only behaves with a leash??
What if my puppy pit almost two this January is not food motivated at all? I’m still trying to stop him from pulling on walks. As soon as I come home he jumps on me and pushes me literally into the house. I try and ignore him but.......he has gotten better though.
That sounds super frustrating! Check out this video that we did on "what to do when foods not working on walks" ua-cam.com/video/SAg8iR0WGUY/v-deo.html Happy Training! ~Dan
My dogs are not jumpy most of the time. But when I’m home they’re like flying in the sky 😅 any tips on that? Cuz they’re like not leashes during the day when they’re home.
She doesn't do it while training but then when not training and off leash she does do it. Especially when we are carrying something. Has been a problem since we got her at 8 weeks, she is now 1 year.
Ok, what do you do if your large pup comes up behind you and jumps up and pushes you on the behind? I have yet to see a way to handle this kind of behavior. HELP PLEASE!
I just took my dog from back of the neck and put him down and said no and he stopped doing that immediately. Tried to do it right way when i said down and then give him treat but he just started jumping on me and then waiting for reward.
I can control my dogs jumping when we meet new people, but we are having a big problem with the dogs jumping when we let them out of their dog run when we come home. I don’t know how to stop that.
So if the dog weighs more than I do .... standing on the leash does not work, he just pulls and I fall over. Turning my back just makes him put his paws on my shoulders from the back - and refuse to get off. I can say Sit, and continue feeding him reward treats ... but maybe I have some other things to do today ... This is not my dog, I am just babysitting. He is kinda starved for attention
i’ve been using your method to train my golden retriever puppy (almost 5 months old). she is crate trained and does really well most of the time, but now i’m trying to get her used to hanging out calmly in the house. she gets way overstimulated by everything happening in the house and if i let go of the leash she gets the zoomies and goes nuts looking for crumbs my kids have dropped on the floor 😅. can you do a video on transitioning to allowing your puppy more freedom in the house??
ps. i do hold the leash and she still tries pulling so hard she chokes herself just to go investigate everything and everyone. i’ve tried staying in one small area and not moving until she’s calm, but once she gets to a new area it starts all over again.
The distractions sound like they are too HIGH for your dog while on the leash. I want you to check out this video: ua-cam.com/video/0pgtnmpwU5c/v-deo.html Happy Training! ~Dan
Have watched loads of these videos and they all use big dogs. What about very small dogs where you have to bend all the time. You get tired before the dog
I have a chow mixed with lab or golden retriever and I can’t get him to listen at all - my In-laws tap him with a magazine and he does listen but I don’t want to do that what should I do?
use a bonker; i.e. a rolled up soft towel tied at the ends with rubber bands or just a small throw pillow; say No and throw it at him hard. After 2 or 3 times he will understand what the word NO means.
Hey Mayra, I want you to watch these 2 videos and let me know what you think! ua-cam.com/video/sG-B3g9i8KU/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/6aBLk1GSMuA/v-deo.html Happy Training! ~Dan
Cant put the lead on in the house. No 1 the dog thinks its time for a walk, no 2 the other two dogs in my house thinks its walk time and pandemonium of excited dogs thinking 'yes' its time to go lol
My dog jumps on everybody (even me) when they come in the door. It's very frustrating because I'm in a wheelchair and I have to tell him to move or get back so I can get in the door way.
Maybe you could have him on a short leash and put a low hook near the door that the leash can be attached to when answering the door? Or if you have a wheelchair leash (such as the one by BLD), maybe you could attach a hook lower on the footrest that you could run the leash under, if dog isn’t too big? It’s a challenge to stop a jumper for sure!
I was looking forward to watching this video but was sadly disappointed. Stepping on a leash is not managing behavior. Blocking a dog with your arm is not managing a behavior. Stepping on a leash is not control. You may want to reevaluate, seems like you are using all the right terms but they’re not matching up with your actions.
I don’t see this to be affective. The place command and down command always worked for any dog I’ve worked with. Playing with the dog this way is just rewarding him/her for bad behavior. It does nothing to stop the dog from jumping on guest when they come in the home.
Are we as patient as this to our own biological children? Do we prepare treats in our pockets and give to our own children EVERYTIME they do what we like?
Hey Judy, here are a couple quick questions I would ask myself if I was in your situation. Am I watching my dog? Do I have a long line on my dog to interrupt the unwanted behaviour? If either of those are a no, I would start there. Your dog is just doing what seems rewarding in the moment without anyone giving them different information. Until they learn in the moment that this in unacceptable behaviour they will keep doing it. Remember dogs learn within 1 second of doing something, timing is ESSENTIAL to help fix this! Happy Training! ~Dan
Your guests will not be able to arrange the dog's leash in such a way that the dog can be controlled. However, swiftly raising your knee into the jumping dog's chest will stop the behavior. You want the dog to get the idea that jumping on people will be hurtful to the dog. Let's be clear. Jumping on people can hurt people. I'm not concerned about causing the jumping dog temporary discomfort to prevent knocking grandma down, breaking her hip and sending her into a recuperative hospital for 2 months. Get your priorities straight. I've been working with dogs for 60 years and the current training methods are ridiculous. If you watch dogs interact, they don't use praise/reward. Dogs use brief, harsh corrections and they don't hold grudges.
No reinforcing the dog with treats and excitement. You talk to much. You have to be calm.. assertive energy. Your making him more excited 😂😂. To jump up 😮😮😮😮
My 5mo old puppy bites hard and jumps. I got him too young. We work with him every day. He sees everything as good attention whether it is negative or positive. He is very rough. He will tear your flesh, leave bruises, and rip your clothes. He has done this since I brought him home. Nothing stops him. Standing on the leash works till you are not. And he gets even more worked up. Timeouts he will just keep doing it.
Dogs can take a lot of work. If you decide to get excited to find out how they learn, and you love them, it can become really interesting and exciting to work on things.It's a total different way of seeing the process. HOWEVER- it's not for everyone! - just like having kids isn't for everyone! (myself included there on the human children) No shame in that- just different personalities and interest levels. I read "The Other End of the Leash" by Patricia McConnell and it made me realize dogs put up with WAAAYYYY more from us than we do from them 😅. Made me decide to just start having total patience. 🐾🐾💕 Just my .02
knowledge is power! when you are confident, when you KNOW you are able to train, then you can maintain your calm while you go thru the process. good luck
@@MegaPerson012345 timeouts are pretty worthless (unless pup needs a nap), and often what they need is more exercise - free-play with another pup, long walks, toss/tug play, mental games (feed with a snuffle mat or a food puzzle), ordinary obediance training (sit, down, stand come, heel, up/off, etc). There are many videos on "stop puppy biting" and you have to keep on correcting while offering pup many options to chew "proper" things. PS I had to wear leather garden gloves for the first few weeks with our bouncy lab pup.
As an accredited dog trainer 15yrs, these guys are spot on!
This is exactly what our 5 month old Aussie has been needing. Nothing else works. Thank you for adding additional methods to try. Our puppy is anything but typical and most training standards do not work for her. Luckily we have these great videos and a wonderful local trainer we are working with. Keep up the great alternative training videos!
Love the excitement barometer!!!
Thank you for including Carol's boo boo & her fix for it. We need to learn that too! ❤ Hey Cole, boop!
Instructor Carol could tell me anything and I would believe it.
Carol's great for the dog and us owners! Thank you for educating us.
We have this problem too, especially with our 14lb mini poo! TY Carol you always do an excellent job!
Very nice. But learning The dog not to jump onvthe handler is one thing. Learning a dog not to jump on a visitor is something else
Maybe try the leash every time a visitor comes over. You are in control, not the dog.
@@sarahsiu2689 the issue is the owner not getting the guests to do it. If your family or guests refuse to train the dog it’s pointless
Most people don’t understand dogs they just toss treats, scream, bad gestures and using human language….
I specifically searched for a video for my pup not to jump on me.
I have trained my dog not to jump on me. The problem is that she gets overly excited around other people, especially when they are walking there dogs. Any ideas?
I can teach my guests how to handle that, but out in public at the dog park off lead or walking on lead on trails is the problem. Thanks.
Thank you for showing a video like this with a pup that is a real jumper like my pup.
Definitely gonna do this with my puppy. She thinks that any attention, good or bad, is so fun 😅
And shes food motivated so i think this will work great for her
Sounds like you are on to something!
Happy Training!
~Dan
Best choice of dog for this topic. Excellent. It worked on my puppy
This was so good! Thank you! I'll definitely be incorporating that exercise into our training routine! Thanks so much for sharing!
Thanks for watching and commenting!
Happy Training!
~Dan
Carol is one of the best trainers. Lover her.
Also Coal is gorgeous, I have 6 standard poodles of my own, and three have been rehomed to me due to lack of training or behavior issues that I’ve corrected. Jumping digging chewing things up and door dashing have been main issues and all due to lack of structured training.
Do you have any recommendations on these? Trying to get my dog out of them. Thank you
😊 thanks it helped
This was really good, as we can always expect from Carol.
The best line was 100% "I didn't do a very good job there". Carol recognised the foot leash slip, how that had caused Khol to make a mistake. She's got the awareness to know the dog is having a problem and not being a problem. Want to be a trainer of the level headedness of Carol when I'm older :P
I tried this with my 3 month old pup. She gets it but I’m a way it makes her more excited that I’m giving her treats as she sits. I almost feel as if I’m rewarding the jumping behavior. I know timing is key, but she doesn’t seem to get it as she continues to jump up and hold her stance by using her paws to grab around my legs. And the jumping up on furniture is a whole new issue. I’ve watched all your videos on how to stop jumping and none seem to work due to her over excitement
Carol is so superior! Another great video from her!
I love carol!
Once again, Carol is awesome! Thank you Carol and Cole♥️
Wonderful! Thank you.
Dogs can easily learn from the owners but it's hard to control dogs when seeing new people.
Jump training should come with all standard poodle owner manuals! As a professional groomer I think this breed is number one for this bad habit. Doodles too.
Hi Carol. Great video, but can you tell me how to stop the jumping without a leash?
My guess is that you keep going until you have to do minimal with the leash, then gradually phase out the leash with the exercises...
My puppy is in the "jump and bite" phase. I look forward to trying this technique. I'm getting pretty scarred.
How often do you recommend to practice this a day?
I have a seven month old standard poodle. That looks just like Cole. And he acts just like Cole… Jumping pulling he’s absolutely joyful but wild. I’m hoping to get this behavior changed.
Do you have to have the leash on all day
I know this isn’t the video to ask this, but my 6 month old sort of potty trained pup can hold her bladder over night and whenever she’s in her kennel, but when she’s out, she has to go every 30 minutes to an hour and no more than that. She goes to the door to tell me, but has an accident if I don’t get to her in time. I’m not even sure if they’re accidents anymore. Also, even if she went potty ten minutes before going in her kennel, when she comes out, she has to go again or she’ll go potty in the house. I’ve been tracking her water for awhile to make sure she’s not drinking too much, and I thought that over time she’d grow out of it, but my eight month old boy can last for hours and has since we got my girl. She’s been this way since we got her and the vet said that she was perfectly heathy. My dad wants to get a shock collar, but I don’t want to. If I can’t figure this out soon, he’ll force me to use one. What do I do and how do I train her out of this?
Hi! I read your comment and at one time my female pup had a similar situation where I noticed she needed to go out way more often and she would squat a couple of time each time she went out which was out of the ordinary for her. When I did a little research I came upon urinary tract infections and sure enough when we took her to the vet she had one! It was easily treated with antibiotics. I know you mentioned taking her to the vet so it’s just a suggestion! Good luck with your baby girl. I hope you can figure this out!!
Instructor Carol…I needed this. My Maxwell is a jumper😩
Glad this helped when you needed it most!
Happy Training!
~Dan
Please do more videos about dog emotions and how to calm them.
Good Idea! Check out this video that we did.
ua-cam.com/video/f0kpcj5sZmQ/v-deo.html
Happy Training!
~Dan
I can get my 6 month old to stop immediately in the house and on the lead and when returning on recall. How do I stop her jumping up on others when she's outside off the lead?
Without a lead on and 100% success on not jumping this is VERY difficult. I would suggest keeping the lead on outside until you have 100% success. Also check out this video!
ua-cam.com/video/bY-jOdWIQq8/v-deo.html
Happy Training!
~Dan
Thank you ! Very helpful.
Thanks for watching and commenting! Don't forget to subscribe and click that 🔔
Happy Training!
~Dan
Is their anyway Ms.Carol could make a video for a VERY hyper Catahoula Mix with a woman who is pregnant coming inside her own house ? Or how to stop my dog when coming home with a newborn in a carrier or having a newborn around ? I'm so concerned my girl Ruby will possibly jump up and hurt me or my soon to be newborn coming this June... I hope this made some sense but I'm just very worried about myself and my new baby plus Ruby. I want us all to be happy and comfortable in our home and to not stress coming home and getting jumped all over especially super pregnant and/or with a newborn. If by chance a video can't be made can you send me some type of link to a video or great site that can help me ?
Thank you guys & have a wonderful 2023 !
Thats a gorgeous poodle! Great videooo
Wonderful - loved the excitement level-meter :) added to my training video library must haves
What do you do when they keep trying the bear hug grab with front legs/ swiping at you while jumping? Those claws can do some damage.
Hi, I have an 8 month old golden. He is leashed to a wall 24/7 outside. 😕(he has access to a portion of the lanai, so he has shelter during the rain.) He rarely gets to go to the garden and play. His leash is about 3-4 meters long. I feel so bad but whenever we release him he goes CRAZY. (Jumps on people, bites, etc.) Right after releasing him, he always jumps on me and bites my hand to get his leash. It is understandable though since it's normal for him to do that as he's leashed most of the time. My fault. One time, he escaped from his leash and he destroyed some of my dad's plants. My dad has anger issues and he WOULD give him away if he knew that. I want to make a change, but i don't know where to start. I want to train him so my parents will finally allow him to free roam around the house 24/7. I want to give him a better life. do you have any tips? He also has a high energy level. he always pulls on the leash, too.
Aly, I'm worried about you and your pup. I take it you are not in the US, right? If I could put you in contact with a well known trainer in the US, would you mind that? You have a lot more issues that can be handled with one question. Do you want and are you willing to put the time into training him?
@@User7688.--_ Yes, im currently not in the US right now. I've tried telling my mom to find a trainer, but she doesn’t want to get one because of the risks of the virus. And yes, I'm willing to do whatever it takes to train him so he doesn’t spend the rest of his life locked up.
Aly, so you spend a lot of time with him? Do you take him for walks. How old are you? I am going to talk with my son who is a very good dog trainer in the US.
@@User7688.--_ Yes, I spend time with him. Although I don’t take him on walks. My helper is usually the one who lets him go potty. My dad sometimes plays with him at night. I don't wanna reveal my age here so let's just say im 10-15. He is pretty big already so he can easily pull me with his leash. But almost every Sunday, my uncle comes to our house and plays with him for about 30 mins to 2 hrs. One time, my cousins came over along with my uncle and they let him free roam outside for 4-5 hours and somehow he still wasn't tired 😅 My parents would allow him to free roam OUTSIDE 24/7 if he wasn't so naughty. We have a lot of plants so it's pretty risky.
Aly, you don't have to reveal anything, okay. That makes me happy that people play with him. What about a trainer coming over to your house, and you and your helper could be six feet away from them and teach you and your helper how to work with him while training him. Are you ambulatory? Even if you are not, you could absolutely be taught how to work, keep him and keep him trained when he is with you. A trainer can train him and show you how to stop him from digging. I'm afraid that if he is continually tied up the older he gets, you may have a way bigger behavior problem than what you have now that no one may be able to fix. Does that make sense? Does he get bones and things to chew on?
thank you
What a great video! May I ask what kind of treat you used in this training?
My issue is my dog doesn’t, or rarely ever, jumps on me but jumps on my husband and visitors. She does this when she’s excited or if I stand to close and talk to them. She’s definitely protective of me.
Same here. Always humans she doesn’t see all the time.
is jumping up a standard poodle thing?! i have a 7 month old standard and he is the jumping king! he can leap super high! his immediate reaction when he gets excited is to jump, especially when meeting new people. ive tried ignoring the jumping and rewarding calm behavior but he just doesn’t seem to get it that way. trying to nip it in the bud while hes still a puppy.
So my puppy jumps randomly when he wants to play so i need to keep the leash on all the time since I don't know when it's going to happen.?
What if yr dog is training in search and rescue and the indication is jump? I do I teach her to jump only on me in training but not to jump at all when not training; is that even possible?
What kind of collar is Cole wearing in this video?
I'm disabled and I can't stand for to long and my 8 month old is a wolfhound cross. I can't stand on his lead he is to strong. I need a sit down method.
This was great only problem is my dod bites the leash so she cant be leashed…😩😩😩
But u don't have the ekahs on all the time. Eventually it has to be off. Some dogs learn that too and know the difference. Then what do u do if he does it when it's off or learns the dif and only behaves with a leash??
I came here because of my issues with my standard poodle jumping STILL at 10 months old.
When I stepped on the leash, my dog starts biting my shoes and legs. What should I do?
What if my puppy pit almost two this January is not food motivated at all? I’m still trying to stop him from pulling on walks. As soon as I come home he jumps on me and pushes me literally into the house. I try and ignore him but.......he has gotten better though.
That sounds super frustrating! Check out this video that we did on "what to do when foods not working on walks"
ua-cam.com/video/SAg8iR0WGUY/v-deo.html
Happy Training!
~Dan
@@McCannDogs thank you Dan 😀🙏🏼
My dogs are not jumpy most of the time. But when I’m home they’re like flying in the sky 😅 any tips on that? Cuz they’re like not leashes during the day when they’re home.
My dog knows not to jump at me but everyone else gets jumped on. Do you have any tips to teach a dog not to jump at other people?
What does "little pulses" mean?
She doesn't do it while training but then when not training and off leash she does do it. Especially when we are carrying something. Has been a problem since we got her at 8 weeks, she is now 1 year.
Not sure if this would work for us as we have a 85lb lab/pitbull mix. He's so heavy that it is hard to push him off.
And what if this still doesn't work? I can't stand on the leash with a boerboel on the other end and his size can't be ignored 😐.
Ok, what do you do if your large pup comes up behind you and jumps up and pushes you on the behind? I have yet to see a way to handle this kind of behavior. HELP PLEASE!
Me too!
What collar are you using?
Hi Carol, love your videos. could you demonstrate this with a smaller dog. also nipping of feet with smaller dog. thanks.
So do you ever turn your back on the dog when it's jumping and that's supposed to stop it?
I just took my dog from back of the neck and put him down and said no and he stopped doing that immediately. Tried to do it right way when i said down and then give him treat but he just started jumping on me and then waiting for reward.
My dog is very similar to Cole but my dog mouths and bites. He is the same size as Cole.
I really enjoy Carol's videos! good clear instructions and nice demonstrations.
I can control my dogs jumping when we meet new people, but we are having a big problem with the dogs jumping when we let them out of their dog run when we come home. I don’t know how to stop that.
Ugh my poodle will suddenly jump and bite my arm while we’re on walks, how can I fix this?
Does this training apply to young puppies (less than 6 months old) as well?
It does, we have a video working with a younger pup as well, check it out here:
ua-cam.com/video/7P1DgDED23o/v-deo.html
Happy Training!
~Dan
So if the dog weighs more than I do .... standing on the leash does not work, he just pulls and I fall over. Turning my back just makes him put his paws on my shoulders from the back - and refuse to get off. I can say Sit, and continue feeding him reward treats ... but maybe I have some other things to do today ... This is not my dog, I am just babysitting. He is kinda starved for attention
i’ve been using your method to train my golden retriever puppy (almost 5 months old). she is crate trained and does really well most of the time, but now i’m trying to get her used to hanging out calmly in the house. she gets way overstimulated by everything happening in the house and if i let go of the leash she gets the zoomies and goes nuts looking for crumbs my kids have dropped on the floor 😅. can you do a video on transitioning to allowing your puppy more freedom in the house??
ps. i do hold the leash and she still tries pulling so hard she chokes herself just to go investigate everything and everyone. i’ve tried staying in one small area and not moving until she’s calm, but once she gets to a new area it starts all over again.
The distractions sound like they are too HIGH for your dog while on the leash. I want you to check out this video:
ua-cam.com/video/0pgtnmpwU5c/v-deo.html
Happy Training!
~Dan
Have watched loads of these videos and they all use big dogs. What about very small dogs where you have to bend all the time. You get tired before the dog
I have a chow mixed with lab or golden retriever and I can’t get him to listen at all - my In-laws tap him with a magazine and he does listen but I don’t want to do that what should I do?
use a bonker; i.e. a rolled up soft towel tied at the ends with rubber bands or just a small throw pillow; say No and throw it at him hard. After 2 or 3 times he will understand what the word NO means.
Hey Mayra, I want you to watch these 2 videos and let me know what you think!
ua-cam.com/video/sG-B3g9i8KU/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/6aBLk1GSMuA/v-deo.html
Happy Training!
~Dan
Cant put the lead on in the house. No 1 the dog thinks its time for a walk, no 2 the other two dogs in my house thinks its walk time and pandemonium of excited dogs thinking 'yes' its time to go lol
My dog jumps on everybody (even me) when they come in the door. It's very frustrating because I'm in a wheelchair and I have to tell him to move or get back so I can get in the door way.
Maybe you could have him on a short leash and put a low hook near the door that the leash can be attached to when answering the door? Or if you have a wheelchair leash (such as the one by BLD), maybe you could attach a hook lower on the footrest that you could run the leash under, if dog isn’t too big? It’s a challenge to stop a jumper for sure!
That’s a tough puppy
This is something I will try with our 100 pound chessie
I just say a firm NO and estimate before he goes and tries to jump on someone and that works for me.
I was looking forward to watching this video but was sadly disappointed. Stepping on a leash is not managing behavior. Blocking a dog with your arm is not managing a behavior. Stepping on a leash is not control.
You may want to reevaluate, seems like you are using all the right terms but they’re not matching up with your actions.
And every time, once her foot is off the leash the dog jumps.
I don’t see this to be affective. The place command and down command always worked for any dog I’ve worked with. Playing with the dog this way is just rewarding him/her for bad behavior. It does nothing to stop the dog from jumping on guest when they come in the home.
This works for dogs that are food motivated. My dog is not food motivated
Love his 1980's style hairdo lol
My 2 yr golden loses control of her emotions when anyone comes it is awful.
Thats super frustrating, check out this whole video!
ua-cam.com/video/bY-jOdWIQq8/v-deo.html
Happy Training!
~Dan
Are we as patient as this to our own biological children? Do we prepare treats in our pockets and give to our own children EVERYTIME they do what we like?
HELP my dog won't stop digging holes in yard. HELP
Hey Judy, here are a couple quick questions I would ask myself if I was in your situation.
Am I watching my dog?
Do I have a long line on my dog to interrupt the unwanted behaviour?
If either of those are a no, I would start there. Your dog is just doing what seems rewarding in the moment without anyone giving them different information. Until they learn in the moment that this in unacceptable behaviour they will keep doing it. Remember dogs learn within 1 second of doing something, timing is ESSENTIAL to help fix this!
Happy Training!
~Dan
A great and very helpful lesson -- thank you! Only, is Carol a "real" trainer??!! Seems legit. Only she has no visible tattoos...
This is exactly what my poodle does 🤦♀️
my dog chews the leash up
Good thing my dog only jumps on me better me than another else
What if my dog is trying to eat my pants, bc he smells the treats?!!!
What if the dog is 90 pounds? This wouldn't be so easy..
Your guests will not be able to arrange the dog's leash in such a way that the dog can be controlled. However, swiftly raising your knee into the jumping dog's chest will stop the behavior. You want the dog to get the idea that jumping on people will be hurtful to the dog.
Let's be clear. Jumping on people can hurt people. I'm not concerned about causing the jumping dog temporary discomfort to prevent knocking grandma down, breaking her hip and sending her into a recuperative hospital for 2 months. Get your priorities straight.
I've been working with dogs for 60 years and the current training methods are ridiculous. If you watch dogs interact, they don't use praise/reward. Dogs use brief, harsh corrections and they don't hold grudges.
My dog knows jumping on people is wrong. So he keeps his front paws to himself while getting in his back feet and licking me in the face. 🤦♀️
Nothing works for my nutbar of a 6 month old boxer. When I stand on the leash, she just grabs it and tugs on it.
same here
We clearly haven't tried everything otherwise we wouldn't be watching this video for new things to try. I'm just saying sherlock 🤷🏼♂️😌
That toy… will get the channel demonetized 😂
It would not work for a 90 pound dog
Why not
So you people don't know
No reinforcing the dog with treats and excitement. You talk to much. You have to be calm.. assertive energy. Your making him more excited 😂😂. To jump up 😮😮😮😮
Too ridiculous! The dog will die of old age before you get him to stop jumping. Apparently you miss the fact that he’s an animal.
Apparently you are not interested in learning
@@TheNordicharps
Ha ha. Took you 11 months to come up with an answer.
@@elizabethwood2000 Actually it took me about a.minute, I saw this today 😊
@@TheNordicharps
I want a happily obedient dog, not a fat one. Nice try sally.
@@TheNordicharps
It takes less than 5 seconds to stop jumping when you know how. Good luck sally.
How the hell does she stay so calm and not get frustrated…. I wish
well said
My 5mo old puppy bites hard and jumps. I got him too young. We work with him every day. He sees everything as good attention whether it is negative or positive. He is very rough. He will tear your flesh, leave bruises, and rip your clothes. He has done this since I brought him home. Nothing stops him. Standing on the leash works till you are not. And he gets even more worked up. Timeouts he will just keep doing it.
Dogs can take a lot of work. If you decide to get excited to find out how they learn, and you love them, it can become really interesting and exciting to work on things.It's a total different way of seeing the process.
HOWEVER- it's not for everyone! - just like having kids isn't for everyone! (myself included there on the human children) No shame in that- just different personalities and interest levels.
I read "The Other End of the Leash" by Patricia McConnell and it made me realize dogs put up with WAAAYYYY more from us than we do from them 😅. Made me decide to just start having total patience. 🐾🐾💕 Just my .02
knowledge is power! when you are confident, when you KNOW you are able to train, then you can maintain your calm while you go thru the process. good luck
@@MegaPerson012345 timeouts are pretty worthless (unless pup needs a nap), and often what they need is more exercise - free-play with another pup, long walks, toss/tug play, mental games (feed with a snuffle mat or a food puzzle), ordinary obediance training (sit, down, stand come, heel, up/off, etc). There are many videos on "stop puppy biting" and you have to keep on correcting while offering pup many options to chew "proper" things. PS I had to wear leather garden gloves for the first few weeks with our bouncy lab pup.