That woman had everything except the right tools. She has an amazing disposition to learn, to change her behaviour in order to achieve a good response, everything was amazing.
When the owner started off with all his medical history that you had to know in order to start training, I was worried, getting 'mummy's little soldier' vibes. But it turned out they were ready to work and learn. High hopes for the three of them, as Barney seems a great dog.
Lots of dogs where I stay come steal the ball.. my dog learned now to come collect a spare from myself and then offers it to the dog. He then goes back to playing fetch with his own ball 😂😂.
Why wasn’t it mentioned what the type of lead is that the trainer was using? This could work for my Lurcher cross (Rescue) that has identical behaviour to this dog (but more reactive to people).
Another example that destroys all the crazy myths around prong collars. 😄 I’m always a bit sad, and I’m laughing at the same time, when a trainer needs to make big speeches about the prong, because of the wrong ideas people have about these tools. In a better world a trainer doesn’t need that.
It's the same with e-collars. There's different settings on it. In the correct hands they work. Respect to these owners learning appropriate training from a professional. I was guilty of the stigma with e-collars until I got my young dog because of how strong he is, we barely need to use it now.
My adopted Staffy loves tug but when she “wins” all she does is lie down & chew it also I’m afraid of losing a hand & I have a bad shoulder so we don’t play it any more
If not used correctly, it can cause physical harm to the dog, including damage to the trachea and neck. This is especially true if the collar is too tight or used with excessive force. Because it is so effective, there is a risk of over-correcting the dog. Prong collars are illegal in Spain, France; Sweden; Austria; Switzerland; and Germany, as well as Victoria, Australia.
ye, because too many people used prong collars wrong, same for other trainingtools.. i myself wouldve never used it anyway, unless an experienced dogtrainer is present
And how do you learn, then? It's the owner being trained as much as the dog. Get the owner trained correctly, and the dog follows. Dog training is not an innate skill - it has to be learned. Have to say, it makes me question why you're watching this.
@@VandromedasTravels 1. It came up on my feed to watch. 2. As a multiple big dog owner i am sick and tired of pussy week people not being able to control there cockerpoos/ small dogs, they think its example behaver for them to bark and lurch at us, then laughing with embarrassment when, I stop to stroke my 160lb mastiff, as if like he is scared, when in fact I desensitise him from there bad practises and stupid behaviours..... If my dogs acted like that they would cry to the police. 3. god help us with people like you "who need to learn".. same with your cry baby kids, that you have no idea how to bring up.
@@VandromedasTravels You are the problem...if you need to be trained as well..... no training can build a relationship with a dog. most people go to work dont have the time.
@@VandromedasTravels those who are home all day with their babies have a better relationship, than those who stick them in nursery/school..FACT. good relationship = good dog /children....no time for them, then they got none for you, and they won't be loyal, and will play you up..
That woman had everything except the right tools. She has an amazing disposition to learn, to change her behaviour in order to achieve a good response, everything was amazing.
When the owner started off with all his medical history that you had to know in order to start training, I was worried, getting 'mummy's little soldier' vibes. But it turned out they were ready to work and learn. High hopes for the three of them, as Barney seems a great dog.
Barney’s dad here 👋 he’s doing really well! Prong collar no longer needed and he is generally a LOT more settled.
I'd is an awful disease. Don't be so ignorant
@@cambrown2991 That is such good news! Great work!
@@cambrown2991 hey glad he’s doing good Barney is a carbon copy of my fox red! What collar did you buy? Very tempted to try if working for you guys
Lots of dogs where I stay come steal the ball.. my dog learned now to come collect a spare from myself and then offers it to the dog. He then goes back to playing fetch with his own ball 😂😂.
Did you use a prong collar?
Get the couple to put it on and feel how it's even pressure and doesn't dig in the way they think
I'm 10 seconds in and getting a idea of the real problem 😅
Je bedoelt het geklets tegen de hond, van de vrouw , en het constant Goodboy op een drukke manier
Why wasn’t it mentioned what the type of lead is that the trainer was using? This could work for my Lurcher cross (Rescue) that has identical behaviour to this dog (but more reactive to people).
It’s a prong collar.. most likely the Hermes springer. Best insuring you use a trainer to train you how to use them and sizing one to the dog. 😊
I’m 2min 55sec in and I can see the issue, it has two legs not four 😉
Another example that destroys all the crazy myths around prong collars. 😄
I’m always a bit sad, and I’m laughing at the same time, when a trainer needs to make big speeches about the prong, because of the wrong ideas people have about these tools. In a better world a trainer doesn’t need that.
It's the same with e-collars. There's different settings on it. In the correct hands they work. Respect to these owners learning appropriate training from a professional. I was guilty of the stigma with e-collars until I got my young dog because of how strong he is, we barely need to use it now.
Good job with a difficult "one" iykyk
My adopted Staffy loves tug but when she “wins” all she does is lie down & chew it also I’m afraid of losing a hand & I have a bad shoulder so we don’t play it any more
Martingale ?
Can i ask what size prong was used please
If not used correctly, it can cause physical harm to the dog, including damage to the trachea and neck. This is especially true if the collar is too tight or used with excessive force. Because it is so effective, there is a risk of over-correcting the dog.
Prong collars are illegal in Spain, France; Sweden; Austria; Switzerland; and Germany, as well as Victoria, Australia.
ye, because too many people used prong collars wrong, same for other trainingtools.. i myself wouldve never used it anyway, unless an experienced dogtrainer is present
Any tool used incorrectly can harm the dog. It’s the handler not the tool. I’m in Scotland so prongs aren’t allowed to be used.
Alot of owners have them too loose as well and they wonder why it doesn't work. If it's a cheap collar they're the ones that cause damage.
Pffffff very much talking while the dog is out of control. Showing how to do it, is more likeful…in my opinion.
*If you need a dog trainer, then you should not own a dog..you are the problem.*
And how do you learn, then? It's the owner being trained as much as the dog. Get the owner trained correctly, and the dog follows. Dog training is not an innate skill - it has to be learned. Have to say, it makes me question why you're watching this.
@@VandromedasTravels 1. It came up on my feed to watch. 2. As a multiple big dog owner i am sick and tired of pussy week people not being able to control there cockerpoos/ small dogs, they think its example behaver for them to bark and lurch at us, then laughing with embarrassment when, I stop to stroke my 160lb mastiff, as if like he is scared, when in fact I desensitise him from there bad practises and stupid behaviours..... If my dogs acted like that they would cry to the police. 3. god help us with people like you "who need to learn".. same with your cry baby kids, that you have no idea how to bring up.
@@VandromedasTravels You are the problem...if you need to be trained as well..... no training can build a relationship with a dog. most people go to work dont have the time.
@@VandromedasTravels those who are home all day with their babies have a better relationship, than those who stick them in nursery/school..FACT. good relationship = good dog /children....no time for them, then they got none for you, and they won't be loyal, and will play you up..
Every dog is different, unnessary comment!