For anyone reading this: I know that dog training can be difficult sometimes, but you're doing great. Keep up the good work, and your dog (and your own sanity) will thank you for it! ❤️💕
haha nice you should thank the kid for asking, he gave you the opportunity to end the session with some very important tip about people asking to pet your dog scenarios .... you declined his request nicely :)
This is very helpful. I will be employing these methods with my next shepherd at a younger age than I did with my current shepherd in order to prevent the reactivity from becoming the go-to behavior.
Good to hear, the earlier you can start the better, but you can also do the same with older dogs, just takes much more time, repetition, and consistency 🐾🇺🇸
@@CanineRevolution absolutely - I didn’t know what I didn’t know. But we did get there with exactly what you said: time, repetition and consistency. I now have an amazing 6-year-old female who has taught me so much about the breed.
I don't think I've ever walked up to a stranger and asked to pet their dog in my life and I love dogs, I don't get why people do that. If a dog comes up to me I'll pet him but otherwise I leave them alone. My puppy was reactive mainly to other dogs and he didn't like strangers just reaching out to pet him, it was really annoying. With lots of socialization training he's come out of it thankfully.
Same, I’d never tough someone else’s dog and I wish people would stop asking me to pat mine. I’m trying to make him neutral to people but they just don’t leave us alone. These days I advocate for my dog and just say no, sorry he’s in training.
Absolutely, annoying. My puppy is 5 months old and it’s bothersome when people stop/stare/ ask questions while I’m walking my dog and getting him to do his business. As soon as he is distracted, he loses focus and trying to get him back on track to walk is overwhelming. I literally have to tell people “ not right now”. We’re walking or ask if they need something since they’re staring so hard. When I see people walking their dog, I don’t disturb them.
For anyone reading this: I know that dog training can be difficult sometimes, but you're doing great. Keep up the good work, and your dog (and your own sanity) will thank you for it! ❤️💕
@@Bankroll98 don't give up! Puppyhood is a challenging phase for everyone. You'll make it though. ❤️💕
💯💯💯thank you for spreading the love!!!
@@CanineRevolution you're very welcome. You are not alone. ❤️💕
What a good thing to know that when he’s anxious it’s better to avoid being pet
I’ve been watching rampages journey back to back, he’s gotten so big and you’re an amazing trainer learning a lot. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed his journey!
Also thank you for showing a dog IN TRAINING. Not an already perfect dog. That takes character. TY TY
It's amazing how well behaved all the dogs are! Mine is a menace. Cannot get him to even acknowlege me when we are outside.
this is the first training video i 've seen that made real world sense. and i have watched many, and been to classes. thank you.
Thanks for watching I’m glad it helped!
Great video to study.
Loved this one. Not easy to find well done, good, real world training to observe, but this checks that box. Glad to run across your content.
Thanks for the feedback, let us know what else you need to see🐾🇺🇸
I had to follow, like and comment because this is one of the best dog training post that I have ever seen.
Well explain I really appreciate this post.
Wow, thank you!
@@CanineRevolution You are very welcome.
Weldone for your professional advice.
I listen to so many dog trainers but you guys work for me,thank you
Great video!!!... well explained, wonderful tips. Thank you 😊
Thanks for the feedback!
haha nice you should thank the kid for asking, he gave you the opportunity to end the session with some very important tip about people asking to pet your dog scenarios .... you declined his request nicely :)
💯it can be tough scenario, but always have your dogs best interest in mind
Nice work. Thank you.
Great video thank you, I have a severely anxious dog I’ve been working with for a year and this really gave me some good tips with his body language.
Awesome! Glad to hear it!
This is very helpful. I will be employing these methods with my next shepherd at a younger age than I did with my current shepherd in order to prevent the reactivity from becoming the go-to behavior.
Good to hear, the earlier you can start the better, but you can also do the same with older dogs, just takes much more time, repetition, and consistency 🐾🇺🇸
@@CanineRevolution absolutely - I didn’t know what I didn’t know. But we did get there with exactly what you said: time, repetition and consistency. I now have an amazing 6-year-old female who has taught me so much about the breed.
I don't think I've ever walked up to a stranger and asked to pet their dog in my life and I love dogs, I don't get why people do that. If a dog comes up to me I'll pet him but otherwise I leave them alone. My puppy was reactive mainly to other dogs and he didn't like strangers just reaching out to pet him, it was really annoying. With lots of socialization training he's come out of it thankfully.
Same, I’d never tough someone else’s dog and I wish people would stop asking me to pat mine. I’m trying to make him neutral to people but they just don’t leave us alone. These days I advocate for my dog and just say no, sorry he’s in training.
People ask all the time to pet mine. If I take him out to events I can’t walk 20 feet without people trying to pet him or talk to me about him.
Absolutely, annoying.
My puppy is 5 months old and it’s bothersome when people stop/stare/ ask questions while I’m walking my dog and getting him to do his business. As soon as he is distracted, he loses focus and trying to get him back on track to walk is overwhelming. I literally have to tell people “ not right now”. We’re walking or ask if they need something since they’re staring so hard. When I see people walking their dog, I don’t disturb them.