Eepie

Eepie

Friday, April 2, 2010

Heeling Towards a Championship






















If you're interested in the higher levels of competition obedience, heelwork needs to be smart and precise.

It is just as easy to train your dog to heel well as it is to train them to lag or heel wide - so why not aim for perfection to begin with? .

For starters, WunderDogs don't wear a collar and lead to learn to heel because we don't use corrections - I can't "correct" something that my dog hasn't yet learned. So I start by teaching my dogs to sit close and square at heel. When they can do that, i move a little and ask them to come up close to me again - back into heel position. When they can do that reliably sideways and through 90 degrees clockwise and anti-clockwise, i ask them to take it around through 360 degrees in both directions. When they can do that and wag their tails at the same time, they're ready to starting working on some straight lines - both backwards and forwards.

When I teach heelwork starting from the static heel position, I don't have to teach an "automatic sit" because it is already there - the dog learns that heel means "sit square by my side unless i'm moving, in which case i want you to move square alongside me and resume heel position when i stop". So i teach heel as a backchained exercise.

The bottom line for heelwork with my dogs is - it must be FUN. I like to see my dogs animated and having a good time when they work - i'm not interested in producing another sad robotic obedience dog with flattened ears and a low-slung tail. In the ring, a wagging tail and a cheeky grin from my dog assures me that regardless of what the judge says about us, we're having a good time and that is the most important thing.

1 comment:

  1. As always I love hearing about your training philosophy! Animated dogs having a good time.....your love for your animals shows in their response to you.

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