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Canis sapiens - gewaltfreies Hundetraining
2 Tage vor
"good" is just the absence of pain. No matter If it is shock, not getting air to breath, being kicked close to the hips, or "just" intimidated by body language.
***
THE LIE OF BALANCED TRAINING
What balanced training looks like and people wonder why I continually educate against this garbage.
The "trainer" is asked what level the shock collar is. He replies 67. It goes to 100. This poor dog is being shocked at 2/3 the maximum level. Watch his thumb on the remote control throughout the video.
On top of that, she's being strangled in a slip lead. The bucking she does at the start of the video is her trying to escape.
When she finally surrenders, the shock is stopped and the noose is released. "Oooh that's amazing" coos the owner (presumably). It's nit amazing. It's abuse.
The dog is then petted and she's told she's a good dog. This is the "balanced" part, an attempt at using positive reinforcement. But the petting has zero to do with any motivation the dog has to do any behaviour. Nothing is being positively reinforced here. Everything this dog does is to escape or avoid the shock and the strangling.
If your dog trainer STARTS any training program with a shock collars, noose (slip lead, grot/garotte) or prong collar there is zero positive reinforcement going on. The dig learns from the start - comply or I'll hurt you, if you don't comply, I'll hurt you til you do.
He has has muzzled the dog so she can't bite him to get him to stop either.
Imagine I'm teaching a human who can't leave or fight back. Thr first thing I do is punch you in the face as soon as you do anything I don't like. After that, it doesn't matter what treats I give you, how much I tell you you're amazing etc, that violence or threat of it is always there.
THERE IS NO BALANCE HERE.
He maybe actually believes that the petting is doing anything remotely meaningful. It's not.
And no, it doesn't make any difference if the dog is "conditioned" to the collar first, that just means she understands the rules of the violence a bit better.
Every "balanced" trainers I have ever come across does some version of this with the exception of 1. This is what they do. There are at least 5 in my local area who do just this and I have to deal with what happens next when the clients report their dogs are now worse.
N.B. I know this is a hard watch, I know it pays into the "trainer wars" but the dog owning public deserve to know. I'll delete any comments which promote, endorse, justify or excuse this type of training or try to defend it. This is not a discussion forum.
It needs to stop.
If you are interested in using a positive approach to resolving aggression and reactivity, our Triangle of Trust package is a great place to start.
https://glasgowdogtraineronline.thinkific.com/courses/triangle-of-trust
P.S. no name calling or such like in the comments please.
#ecollartraining #ecollar #balancedtraining #balanceschmalence
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Canis sapiens - gewaltfreies Hundetraining
2 Tage vor
It can be all too easy to look at a behaviour, particularly one that we find problematic, as an isolated thing that just occurs, or is put down to false and outdated ideas like 'dominance' or 'stubbornness'.
Think of behaviour as a symptom - underlying that behaviour there is an emotion driving that behaviour. Behaviours don't happen just 'because', there is always a reason for them and so it's up to us to learn how to understand what they are trying to tell us so we can work out what that emotion is.
And at the root of it all there will be a need. Something that is causing the dog to feel that particular emotion and so lead them to show the behaviour that we are seeing. Once we have discovered the emotion the dog is feeling, we can work out what the dog needs and help them to get whatever that may be.
The three pictures here give an example:
Behaviour: the dog is barking at something. If you look at their posture and body language the body is leaning back, away from what they are barking at. The ears are back, whiskers flared, and eyes fixed on something. The front paw is slightly lifted and there is a back paw in the air, and the back end of the dog may be lowered towards the ground a little.
Emotion: what the overall picture of the body language is telling us is that the dog is scared of the thing they are barking at, so the emotion they are feeling is fear.
Need: What this dog needs is immediate space from the thing that is bothering them, so they can feel relief from that fear and feel safer again. What they need going on is an increased feeling of safety and security, more trust in us to help them if they need it or get them out of a situation if it's too much for them.
When we can understand the need and emotion driving the behaviour we can understand our dogs far better and see where they need our help.
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