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Lizmo

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Posts posted by Lizmo

  1. I've never found them to be worth it. A few of our neighbors have tried them and their dog/s always escaped and came down to our fence to bother our dogs. It's annoying. And of course once the dogs got out, they never went back in till the owner came and got them.

     

    Luckily for us, all our neighbors have since put up physical fences. :rolleyes:

  2. Blaze usually ignores strangers. If we are out walking, he'll look over at them, ears up, but quickly leaves them alone and goes back into 'walking' mode when I tell him to leave it. If we stop and talk to someone, he usually ignores them. Depending on the person he might go up to them, or might not. If we have people over at our house that he has not met or only seen a time or two he's very good with them. He'll say come and see what's up, but then leaves them alone. He's really good about meeting people, not shy.

     

    With people he knows, he has the nickname "mr. wiggly butt" for a reason, lol.

  3. BahhhhHumbugggggg right back at ya. Right now I'm dealing with neighbors who think it's fine to let there Chi roam and just a few minutes ago saw a loose pup, no more than 6 weeks, running around with no owner in site (I know where both dogs came from though. Bad neighborhood). I feel like pulling my hair out. :rolleyes: And the city says the main problem with stray dogs in this area is they aren't getting fixed. No. It's called owner responsibility!!

     

    /end my vent of the day. lol

  4. We do a combination of several games to play fetch, so I don't just practice mindless ball throwing.

     

    We do too. Sometimes if he needs to just *run* if we've been cooped up in the house all day, then I'll throw the ball for him. But generally if I have a ball, it's going to be used for training purposes. We mix up ball 'playing/training' alot. We do lots of what Karen talked about, by throwing the ball THEN releasing him. Usually we do alot of calling off before getting to the ball, making him lie down on his way to get the ball, calling back to me, and whatever else I can think of to make it different.

     

     

    The run into things, each other, rip crutiates spinning after erratic bounces, tear pads etc.

     

    I'm finding Blaze has started doing this more. He will just take *OFF* then sliiiiiide. Unless the ball is throw really far, then he has a bit more sense to slow down before he gets to the ball.

     

    We've pretty much stopped mindless ball throwing for now since he seemed to have lost his sense of judgement.

  5. Just wanted to make sure everyone realizes that T. Yamamoto, the author of American Lambs, is Tea on our Boards, and that Anna Guthrie, the author of Working With a Stockdog, is stockdogranch on our Boards. Also, now that I've gotten my copies, I see that the illustrations/diagrams for Anna's book were done by Sue Rayburn, who is Sue R on our Boards. It's nice to see the members of our community producing such fine work.

     

    I looked at this thread a while ago, and didn't realize these books were written/done by board members. Thanks for pointing this out!

  6. Just thought of another place that you could bring a pup. Around here soccor is going on right now, and that is a good way to socialize a pup. If dogs are allowed to soccor/baseball/softball fields in your area, you can bring a pup there. I brought my then puppy to baseball and softball games when he was a pup and most people/kids were pretty level headed in how they acted around him. I'd check with your Parks and Rec. dep. first, though.

  7. I just pulled out the clicker for the first time with Blaze the other day. I can't believe I waited this long. We did some simple click/treat and touch hand/click/treat. He got so excited by the middle of our short session. So we ended after about 10/15 minutes of doing that. Then a couple days went by and I pulled out the clicker. We worked on a bow command this time. Within about 5 minutes he was succesfully offering a bow!

     

    Clicker hooked. :rolleyes:

  8. Like others have pointed out, doing what looks like 'herding' moves on a ball in no way correlates to actually working livestock. The only 'pre training' you can do with your pup before stock is teach him/her people manners, recall, and a lie down. Even then, most those commands go in one ear and out the other the first few times they're working stock. :rolleyes:

     

    I hope your pup turns out to be the sheepdog you want.

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