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The Silver Lining a.k.a. The “Look” Command

May 2, 2018 By Jodi

Since Sampson did a partial CCL tear on his ‘good’ leg, we’ve had a restructuring of walks.

Oh the dogs still get two walks each per day, except now they get them separately. Sampson just can’t go as far, or as long as Delilah can. And it’s not fair to Delilah to have her walks cut short, just to save me the extra time.

SO…I set my alarm for 5:00 am, (my clock is about 20 mins fast) (eventually,) I drag my ass out of bed, and give my dogs their morning walks.

Sampson’s walks are always timed. Eight or nine minutes, then turn around and head home.

Delilah’s are a bit longer, but hers are more designed by routes, and some are longer than others. Because I’m pressed for time there are certain routes I will not take on a work day. On the weekends, she basically has carte blanche.

Taking four walks a day can definitely be challenging, but I’m all about finding that silver lining.

The silver lining in this situation is, managing one dog at a time is a hell of a lot easier than dealing with two.

Walking one dog, also allows me time to work with them individually. You may recall, both of my dogs can be reactive, but for different reasons.

Remember this?

Gif courtesy of Giphy.com sourced from Reddit

(That was the day I sat down in the grass to keep myself from being pulled across the street by my dogs. Let me just say, that was not a stellar day in my dog owning book, so I set out to change that.)

FTR, Sampson is reactive because he’s excited to see and meet, new people and new dogs.  Delilah is reactive because, well, she’s Delilah. Honestly, I never quite figured out why she reacted. If I had to guess, I think she senses the energy/personality of the other dog. She knows when another dog is going to be a jerk, and she takes the lead. It’s her, kill or be killed attitude. I believe it’s how she survived before she found us.

I think that’s a digression, but I felt like I had to add it.

We rarely encounter dogs in the mornings. (That’s what dragging your ass out of bed at 4:45 am will do for you.) But in the afternoons, we’ve been known to encounter dogs, dogs, dogs, and dogs.

I’m super lucky (or cursed, depending on how you look at it,) because I have Labradors, and Labradors are highly motivated by food.

Lucky because a food motivated dog WANTS to get that treat. Cursed because a  food motivated dog WANTS to get that treat. (Caution: working with a highly excited food motivated dog can result in injuries such as scratches, unintended bites, bumps, bruises and in some instances, falling over.)

To help control her reactivity, I worked Delilah extensively with the “Look”command (which pulls her mind of the dog(s) and puts her focus on me.)

How To Teach The Look Command

Personally, I feel the look command is one of the easiest to teach.  Hold a treat in between your thumb and forefinger, make sure your dog sees the treat, then bring the treat up to just about where your nose runs into your forehead. Your dog should automatically follow the trajectory of the treat. Once your dog is doing this reliably, add your command of “Look,” “Watch,” or “Focus,”  whichever word you want to associate with this command.  **Author’s Note :  I highly recommend NOT using the thumb and forefinger for this visual command. While your dog will certainly understand, you might get some strange looks from your neighbors.

You want me to look at you, instead of at this delicious bone? You might be better served looking through the view finder, this photo is a bit blurry.

We’ve got this command down pretty well. In fact, most times we can walk past a yard dog without me having to pull out a treat. Sometimes I have to remind her with “Look,” but mostly she just ignores the other dog. And of course, she gets rewarded after, but it’s much easier to reward a calm dog, than one who is overly excited.

Typically, our dog encounters were with dogs in (or coming out of) their yards, but now, with the fair-weather-dog-walkers, we do encounter dogs walking past us. This has been more challenging, but what I discovered with my treat-motivated-Labrador is…pull a treat out, cup it in my closed fist and hold that right in front of her nose and keep walking. I am usually talking as we do this, encouraging her by telling her what a good girl she is.

I’m proud to tell you, that we have successfully walked past walking dogs.

Try to say that three times fast. (Never mind, I just did and it was easy.)

For me, “Look” is one of the most important commands I can teach my dog.  What’s a command you can’t imagine not teaching your dog?

 

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Comments

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Filed Under: Training Tagged With: Positive Dog Training

Comments

  1. FRAN says

    May 2, 2018 at 2:38 am

    LISTEN! then utter silence so he can hear….

  2. Emma says

    May 2, 2018 at 6:19 am

    Leave it is big with my sisters. My mom too walks four times a day as I go alone and my sisters together. Actually they run several mornings a week instead of walking, but it all takes up a lot of time. Mom spends over three hours a day getting us all out for exercise. She loves it, but says it sure would be nice to do it all in two rather than four shifts. I ignore other dogs, but my sisters always want to meet everyone, I’m sure that comes as no surprise and it is nearly impossible to train them as a twosome while walking as you know.

    • Jodi Stone says

      May 2, 2018 at 9:39 am

      Kudos to Mom. It’s a LOT of work. Most days it takes me about two hours, but both my dogs are definitely seniors and walking too much more than that, is too much for them.

      Training two at the same time is wicked hard. I could Delilah under control, but then when Sampson reacted, she would follow. It’s just easier one on one for me.

  3. Mary Hone says

    May 2, 2018 at 8:49 am

    I’m glad Torrey is good at Drop it, and also Stop. She will drop whatever is in her mouth, and she will stop running after something.

    • Jodi Stone says

      May 2, 2018 at 9:33 am

      That’s great. I imagine she can find lots of ‘stuff’ where you travel. 🙂

      I also like Stop. I know some people don’t train that, but I’ve always found it helpful. It kept Sampson from getting hit by a car when he was much younger.

  4. Monika & Sam 🐾 says

    May 2, 2018 at 10:51 am

    My version is ‘watch me’ and like you said is only effective if you are pro-active. A reacting dog is already beyond the redline state and only dragging her away (or reversing direction) will change that. Now if I only could ‘read’ why Elsa reacts with some dogs and not others. Maybe it’s a girl thing? Sam could care less. 😊

  5. Cupcake says

    May 2, 2018 at 4:30 pm

    Awesome! Look is a big one. Mom calls it “TREAT??” That gets my attention every time. ….almost every time.

    Love and licks,
    Cupcake

  6. Lee and Phod says

    May 2, 2018 at 6:33 pm

    I am currently walking 3, and miss walking just two!

  7. jan says

    May 2, 2018 at 7:05 pm

    “QUIET is one that didn’t staet out as an obedience command but now is indispensible.

  8. Jan K says

    May 3, 2018 at 2:11 pm

    I use “watch me” as well, but the truth is we haven’t practiced it much with distractions; since I practice avoidance more than anything else!
    “Bed” and “lie down” are big ones for us, because we can use it in so many circumstances. My hubby has a bad habit of feeding Luke from the table when he’s eating his lunch, and so Luke gets to practice “bed” a lot! I can just point to a spot and he’ll go lie down there without me having to say anything.

  9. Shadow and Ducky's Mom says

    May 4, 2018 at 11:31 am

    I was working with Ducky on her focus cue – I like that word so much better than “command” – but things in our world got turned sideways for a while (and still are). Shadow is soooo good, she just does what I ask of her (most of the time). ❤️

About Jodi

jodiHi, my name is Jodi. Thanks for stopping by and checking out my blog! I have all kinds of fun writing about my two crazy pups, Sampson and Delilah. Find out more!

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