Shape Train Send to Cone for Dog Agility and Obedience Foundation
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 10 ก.พ. 2025
- Learn how to shape train a dog to run to a cone and circle back to the handler. This is a foundation behavior for competition obedience and agility. It teaches the dog to work away from the handler. Professional trainer trains the dog in a manner of minutes then talks the owner through the same steps. #baebeasdogtraining #shapetraining #dogtraining
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Gosh, I love her exuberance and she's so smart.
All our Dobermans are this smart. The hardest part of training a dog is knowing more than they do😊
she is beautiful, and very clever. I haven't seen Doberman ever been used before in dogtraining. Speaking as a former competion participant and therefor have been joining many dog training courses, also took the dogtrainer education in Denmark at the DCH.DK. So I love your videos. You show and explain very understandable your point. And I love to see your Dobermans working 😍
Thank you for your kind words. I love my Dobermans and they love to work.
Are you saying climb on or pylon?
Pylon, that’s my verbal cue to wrap.
@@BaebeasDogTrainingPortland Thank you for answering! Do you think it is easier to teach the dog to wrap the cone and interrupt the full return to you by saying sit at the cone? Or, alternatively, training the dog to have a cone command and sit in a certain location next to the cone? Where in, the cone cue does not include a rap? Does that make sense?
@@mollasima3251 yes, it makes sense. Are you thinking to use this to “send to cone” in Rally Master? Before the Rally Master class existed, my dogs had a solid cone wrap. I use the same verbal cue in Rally “pylon” and ask them to sit after the wrap. They sit within 12” of the cone.
@@BaebeasDogTrainingPortland gotcha! Yes, i am thinking to use this in Rally Master class. Sadie (my dog) had a solid cone wrap as well - defined as well go out around a cone and return to me. I was initially teaching this skill as interrupting the cone wrap with a sit cue...
That was going well, but then i wondered if doing that could mess up her nice clean wrapping behavior? So then tried a new different cue. Which I'm calling 'cone'. I put a contact pad where i want her to sit near the cone and fading the contact pad (which i have not fully done yet).
Anyway, I'm just wondering your thoughts on what is the most clear way to train this...? Maybe you've seen handlers try both and thoughts on it?
@@mollasima3251 never heard of anyone using a contact pad, because I don’t think it’s too necessary. I use the same pylon cue in rally. My dog knows sitting is situational and it doesn’t mess her up for when I want her to wrap and come back to me.