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| "Tips on training
can make you almost as purrfect as me." |
Training starts from the day you interact
with your animal. A good start will ensure a long happy
relationship. Here are a few tips to find a good trainer
or start on your own. Training is not hard if you know what
to do.
Training starts in your home. A good trainer
will come to you and teach you how to handle your animal.
This happens when the trainer gets to know you and your
environment. I always tell my clients, I am training you
how to train the animal because I want you to have that
bond with the animal not me.
Multiple weeks of training is a waste of
precious time. Basic training methods should have been taught
to you right from the beginning. Only when you want to do
specialty training should the process with you and a trainer
stretch over a period of time. There are also special cases
with the elderly and special people that may take longer.
Socialization starts with you. Do not worry
if the animal interacts with an assortment of animals at
the beginning; let him bond with you. Socialization should
come after an animal is trained. With your guidance a trained
animal that trusts and respects you will handle themselves
correctly in most situations. They will have the confidence
in you to socialize or not. Some animals just may not like
other animals or may just naturally be nervous to the outside
world. However, if trained correctly they will tolerate
the situation. Be aware of your animal's needs.
Some animals will change with age. Spaying
or neutering is helpful and healthier for an animal in most
cases.
Never use choker chains or pinch collars,
as this could be considered abusive. It is unnecessary to
cause pain to an animal that you are trying to teach, particularly
one that is not aggressive.
Gentle Leader is another form of lead (collar).
Most people look at the name and think this lead is a good product. Our opinion is that
gentle leaders are great advertisements. Just because the company came up with
the word gentle does not mean it is true. The gentle leader
handles like a muzzle and pulls the animal in an unnatural
position. Once again your best tool for training is you
and a regular nylon collar
Trainers that use these methods just want
to use a quick fix. Usually they are uneducated or scared
of the animal. Think about it, if you feel pain, would you
think of the command or the area that hurts. You truly do
not get the full focus of the animal.
If a trainer uses "sit" as a first
command, be careful. The first lesson you must teach an
animal is to focus. This can be done in different ways depending
on the animal.
Do not train with food. This may get an
animal to bite. They are always wanting food, so they might
get frustrated. Also, if you use food and someone such as
a child has food, they may want it. The animal may become
food aggressive. If trainers train with food, once again
it is a quick fix with a bad end result. What happens if
you need that animal to obey you and you do not have any
food? There are much better ways to train with the end result
that you won't look like a menu; instead you will receive
respect, trust and love. You will want the animal to listen
to you without devices. Which leads me to the next subject;
clickers. Don't use them. You will need to get rid of the
clicker eventually, so why not train correctly from the
beginning. Also, what happens if you lose your clicker,
or the worst nightmare someone else has a clicker.
The right toys at the beginning is very
important. Do not use material toys (such as cloth, rope,
socks, etc.) It is hard for the animal to tell the difference
between a couch and his toy. Let him get to know your home
better. Squeaky toys sound like little children, we do not
want to promote when an animal hears a sound like that he
should chew it. Good toys are balls; they promote a bond
and teach them commands. Bones are good, except rawhide.
If your animal will not chew on anything else, use compressed
rawhide (not soft rawhide) or the ones that break up in
tiny little hard places. Big pieces can get stuck in their
throat and rawhide swells in the belly. Tug toys are not
suggested is an animal tends to bite. Let him know his boundaries
before you play with him like that. The same suggestion
applies to playing with animals with your body parts such
as your hands, feet, hair,etc.
Training an animal takes patience. You must
make the time to come out of all training sessions on a
positive note.
We hope these few suggestions will help
you in your training and decision making.
We have been established for over 13 years,
living and working with hundreds of animals at one time,
many which are of different species and breeds. Our experience
in working with these animals has given us a great deal
of practical knowledge that has made us a leader in our
field of animal care, education and support.
If you need help, Creative Acres offers
training.
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