Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Words for thought: On training

The wisest words on training I have probably read this year... 

To be the best trainer that we can be, we are striving for an impossible goal - a goal that we will never achieve. Even though we set our clear goal, and aim for it, as we begin learning and growing to what we once had our sites set on, our goal will no longer be good enough. Our eyes will have gotten trained to desire a more finite picture, one that we previously could not see. This makes training dogs both impossibly hard, and very alluring!
This is the frustration that I see in many people after having successfully trained their first dog. My mentor says that training your first dog is like successfully completing your first 5000 piece jigsaw puzzle. You can admire your hard work and skill, but in no way has it made the task easier, nor will it allow you to cut corners for your next 5000 piece jigsaw puzzle. Granted, you might be more careful about losing puzzle pieces, or forcing pieces into the wrong spot, but you will still find the same effort, dedication and work is required to complete the second puzzle. And maybe more, depending upon the puzzle, because generally our future dogs are more challenging, not less so.
There is nothing easy about getting good; it demands effort, grit and deliberate practise, in wind, rain, sleet and snow, often with very little improvement from day to day. It is in these moments that our once 'work' of training our dogs slowly becomes a love and passion as we get hooked on the details and nuances required for each and every dog.
Most often we get the dogs that we need, meaning that the skill required is just within our reach with effort and determination. Though sometimes the work seems too hard for our skill level; the improvements non-existent despite our effort and commitment. When stuck we need to set up moments for ourselves where we can get our motivation back. This might be walking or training with friends, going to a weekly class to keep you on track, journalling, or long peaceful walks where you can clear your head and think.
Only our inner engagement will make us good trainers. We need to stay engaged, and must be thinking about what we are doing. There is nothing rote about training dogs. If you are just going out and doing, that is all that you will ever do. Reading this blog, going to a seminar, or attending weekly class will all have zero benefit if you don't process it, understand it, and later reflect. All true masters of dogs have spent their 10,000 hours thinking. Not reading. Not learning. But thinking, practicing, thinking some more, and practicing again.
Don't get me wrong. Learning is needed. But learning will often be coming from your own mind, when you work out your problem and brainstorm for solutions. If you cannot find a solution, you can ask, but asking alone without first brainstorming won't teach you how to think. It is even useful to remember things that you did, that got you the wrong result. That action that got you something, even though it was not wanted in that moment, might be right tomorrow when you need that result.
My long winded moral to this story is that we must all learn to think. We must have the tenacity and inner grit to train our dogs even when we don't want to, and then we must process and think about what went right, and what we need to change. Our practice must happen often enough that we remember this into our next session so that we can actually change.
Becoming good takes a long, long time, and probably three dogs before it becomes more fluid. But it is worth it. The process with each dog is such an honor that we are all blessed to have.
Monique Anstee
Victoria, BC

Friday, September 25, 2015

Fear: The great stigmatized training motivator

I got your attention now?

Fear rules our lives. It dictates jumping out in front of traffic, running away from bears and crazy people. Fear has been stigmatized as a  training method to make your dog want to behave for fear of what you might do if they don't. For a long time positive only people have made a strong and true case that positive training teaches your dog better, which it does. But what we have neglected to pass along to friends or anyone who not along for the revolution and the following battle was that, while we no longer use fear directly, fear still plays its' role in training.

Fear is why we want our dogs to behave in public. But we better not be judged. Your dog better be not wearing a chain or a shock collar or a pinch collar. This fear that we have, being judged.We are driven by fear to have a well behaved animal; that our dog won't kill the neighbors kid. Fear is why we have moved to positive only training. But unfortunately it's why we can't discipline our kids, don't trust our neighbors even though our houses have gotten closer. We fear for ourselves because we can no longer give others fear without being labeled. I fully believe good dog to owner relationships are based on trust, that one will not hurt the other, or hurt will not come to them. But if done right our dogs trust us not to let them feel fear. No creature, us or them, wants to fear.

I learned this the greatest when I started hunting with my terriers. They trusted me, that if they went down that tunnel, like countless times before, they would succeed and scare the game into bolting. I built up their confidence, but I shut down their lash-outs and they trust me. They trust my commands are for their best interest, that I care for their well being. Dogs evolved along us to work with us, they are naturally inclined to trust our directions. But they have an ingrained fear already that if they do not listen they will not survive. This is a good thing, they do not need to be trained fear. This means that they are more inclined to listen and not run into traffic. They want to keep us happy.

Dog do need to fear us. In a way that if they do lash out something might be taken from them, whether it might be your attention, your approval or their ability to roam freely. I read in a brochure for training that someone kenneled dogs not because they were in time out but because they had been 'over-stimulated' and need time alone. I don't care how you approach that but when your dogs acts out and you kennel them (if your dog is kennel trained that's it's their happy quiet place) then that dog knows that when it acts out (biting too much, being too rambunctious) they have had you remove them and put them not with you. Which is a punishment.

When I saw that I almost lost it. We have become so afraid of being judged we no longer want to see a punishment as an actual punishment.

Our dogs trust us naturally but they also naturally fear disobeying us. We should always nurture the trust, we should always be proud of them when they do well. We should not forget that they evolved to fear disobeying us. It was important to their survival then and it's important to their survival now. They know this. We need to remember this.


Saturday, September 12, 2015

Freedom forever, from barn life to apartments

I am that person. I have kept a terrier in an apartment for their whole life. People judge me and rental companies hate me. It doesn't help that terriers get a (well deserved) bad rap.
The thing is I know what I am doing. I have had a terrier my whole life. I can't imagine my life without their second opinion involved. They keep me down-to-earth, it might have something to do with their short stature, honest and lighthearted. So I should do right by my dogs after all.
That terrier smile.
But I know it's not true. They born with a wild side, one I have indulged and loved. They have wrestled in the hay, chased mice out of the grain and made friends with their other domesticated brethren. They have slept outdoors, jumped into rivers and water troughs, chased four wheelers, ridden in and on countless vehicles and now know what it is like.
I do not care what anyone else has said, there is nothing as brilliant as bringing out the buried genetic code within your dog. Watching a dog discover what it's like to let go and do what they were designed to do is honestly, for me, a moving experience and the closest thing I can find to miracles.
I believe that a farm dog is the happiest dog now. Before I did not quite understand what it could offer that I could not living in the suburbs. Now I have realized that while my dogs are happy just being and working with me, nothing takes the place of living that life.
I have always found time to take my dogs out and work them. Take them packing and back out into the great wide world and will continue to do so. I know they are happy just doing what I am doing even if that's just a stroll downtown.
Anyone who has had a farm or ranch dog knows they will always have that side of them. My dogs still can't help it. Anytime we drive by cattle or fresh cut hay they perk up. roll down the window and cry as we drive by.