Until you as an owner are made aware of what you need to do to tackle unwanted behaviours, you have no idea. Jacub and all the guys at YCA make things so very understandable, clear and uncomplicated, which as someone who has to continue the training on a day to day basis unsupervised is invaluable. Leo was dealt a crappy hand by my accident meaning the day to day interactions just suddenly stopped. Now even still with significant damage and loss of feeling in my leg, i can walk him. If it goes wrong and he reacts i can safely manage him and correct the behaviour. Jacub is on hand anytime to answer any questions and unlike some other trainers is genuinely interested in his progress and any updates. I cant thank the YCA team enough 🙌🏻
Nice to see another “balanced” trainer using fulfilment, diet and lifestyle changes! really looking into the full picture and root causes rather than being obsessed with punishment and rewards, so bad when people believe everything is as simple as a “learnt behaviour” and because it’s learnt we need to punish it rather than looking at WHY they learnt it.
Brilliant video. Seen several trainers and probably learnt more from this than days of training elsewhere. Every credit to you both. All very easy to understand with outstanding results. 👏🏼
Crikey, my 5.5 month old GSD is exactly like that, despite being socialised massively since 12 weeks old. Thanks for sharing this video and your guide, we may be in touch if I can’t get it sorted.
I can’t watch to the end, the language is so abrasive and unnecessary. I need to train myself to ignore it, but it’s so hard, I need to take myself out of the situation. Words do have meaning, why abuse them?
Excellent video and advice. I learned a very similar method with my dog just prong collar instead of slip lead. Almost ready to start e collar work. I have noticed so many dogs that are not under control since we've been hitting the walking trails.
Great stuff! Although I am now confused about treating in place 😂 I recall hearing in a recent C&C podcast that doing so can drive anticipation and prevent the dog from truly settling - is there any reason you’re treating in place in this scenario compared to when you advise not too?
Dog dependant! Yes can create some anticipation BUT if you 1. Room service (food to the dog) 2. Don’t “yes” release You should be okay If he (Leo) was inside the house I probably wouldn’t pay for place at all. But since there’s dogs about in this scenario probably not the worse idea for Leo. Thanks for the question!
I adopted a dog (Belgian Tervuren) at appx. 4 years old, and she is way more reactive, the first walk I took her on she nearly drug me into a 4 lane road ( I am 300 lb (136 KG)) and when she starts getting better, the glimpse of another dog, it seems like she resets, and I have to start all over
Same. I rescued a 18mo old sweetie only to be held hostage by her manic behavior. She seems to be progressing, then the doorbell rings, or a deer walks by, and she's back to maniac. You know the song... looks like an angel,but she's a devil in disguise.😢
Until you as an owner are made aware of what you need to do to tackle unwanted behaviours, you have no idea.
Jacub and all the guys at YCA make things so very understandable, clear and uncomplicated, which as someone who has to continue the training on a day to day basis unsupervised is invaluable.
Leo was dealt a crappy hand by my accident meaning the day to day interactions just suddenly stopped. Now even still with significant damage and loss of feeling in my leg, i can walk him. If it goes wrong and he reacts i can safely manage him and correct the behaviour.
Jacub is on hand anytime to answer any questions and unlike some other trainers is genuinely interested in his progress and any updates.
I cant thank the YCA team enough 🙌🏻
What a lot of very good trainers don't realize is that they're not really training the dogs,what they're really doing is training the humans...
I love this, but what about footage of you working with the dog in the beginning when you first received him to get him to where he is now
Again..total honesty..to a level even a sad fookin geordie can understand..😊
Nice to see another “balanced” trainer using fulfilment, diet and lifestyle changes! really looking into the full picture and root causes rather than being obsessed with punishment and rewards, so bad when people believe everything is as simple as a “learnt behaviour” and because it’s learnt we need to punish it rather than looking at WHY they learnt it.
Amazing what a difference, well done to the young lady
Bit too much effin' and jeffin, mate!
Totally!! I'm no prude but I wouldn't dream of swearing in front of clients - or hiring someone that does. It's incredibly unprofessional.
My weimy used to be like Leo, still is sort of, going download your stuff, yep Train the human, didn't realise this till recently,
This is super helpfull video, thank you!
LOL - Yorkshire counting - 1 Mississippi, 2 Mississippi, 3 Mississippi
Owner learnt so quickly too!
Brilliant video. Seen several trainers and probably learnt more from this than days of training elsewhere. Every credit to you both. All very easy to understand with outstanding results. 👏🏼
Great video, guys 👏🏼
Brilliant trainer .
amazing vid!
Top boy 😊
This guy is a good trainer
Crikey, my 5.5 month old GSD is exactly like that, despite being socialised massively since 12 weeks old. Thanks for sharing this video and your guide, we may be in touch if I can’t get it sorted.
I can’t watch to the end, the language is so abrasive and unnecessary. I need to train myself to ignore it, but it’s so hard, I need to take myself out of the situation. Words do have meaning, why abuse them?
😂
I don’t think you stand a chance of being a successful dog trainer on social media UNLESS you swear these days… 😵💫
Totally!! I'm no prude but I wouldn't dream of swearing in front of clients - or hiring someone that does. It's incredibly unprofessional.
Excellent video and advice. I learned a very similar method with my dog just prong collar instead of slip lead. Almost ready to start e collar work. I have noticed so many dogs that are not under control since we've been hitting the walking trails.
Hiya, loved this because you are coaching the owner as well as training the dog. Good work Jacob 🤩
Great stuff! Although I am now confused about treating in place 😂
I recall hearing in a recent C&C podcast that doing so can drive anticipation and prevent the dog from truly settling - is there any reason you’re treating in place in this scenario compared to when you advise not too?
Dog dependant! Yes can create some anticipation BUT if you
1. Room service (food to the dog)
2. Don’t “yes” release
You should be okay
If he (Leo) was inside the house I probably wouldn’t pay for place at all. But since there’s dogs about in this scenario probably not the worse idea for Leo.
Thanks for the question!
I adopted a dog (Belgian Tervuren) at appx. 4 years old, and she is way more reactive, the first walk I took her on she nearly drug me into a 4 lane road ( I am 300 lb (136 KG)) and when she starts getting better, the glimpse of another dog, it seems like she resets, and I have to start all over
Same. I rescued a 18mo old sweetie only to be held hostage by her manic behavior. She seems to be progressing, then the doorbell rings, or a deer walks by, and she's back to maniac. You know the song... looks like an angel,but she's a devil in disguise.😢
Just wow. I need you to meet our dog Stanley 😂
What a difference, great to see the owner doing so well
GROW UP😅😅😅😅