
Without doubt Border Collie’s are one of the most intelligent breeds, and it is this that can make training them very frustrating. Border Collies have their own innate quirky behavior and traits. There is an old saying, “Don’t teach a Border Collie a trick you are not prepared to live with for the next 10 to 15 years”.
Teaching your Border Collie to sit is one of the very first commands you will teach it. Consistency is the key to any dog training, and for the Border Collie it is even more important. A Border Collie is so perceptive that if you do not use the same commands every time it just will not understand you. An example of this is that you teach your dog to sit using a hand signal, pointing at it with your index finger, when you tell it to sit. And, you reward it for this behavior....
Subconsciously, one day you use your right hand and point at your dog as you tell it to sit and your dog just stands there. Most dogs would still sit. But most Border Collie’s will just look at you or turn its head away trying to work out what you want. The words are the same but the signal changed. This is how perceptive the Border Collie dog breed is.
This is most frustrating for anyone who is not experienced with Border Collies.
Introducing the Concept of Training
Start introducing your Border Collie puppy to the concept of training using treats. Have a supply of shredded chicken or grated cheese ready and start teaching puppy to respond to words, for example, its name. Every time you say the word, reward it with a little chicken or cheese.
Keep doing this until puppy responds by looking to you for a treat on hearing the word. Once your puppy starts to do this it has learnt what you want when you use that word and knows it will get a treat for responding correctly.
Teaching your Border Collie to Sit
Most people start with ‘sit’ as the first command they want to teach their Border Collie. Here is a very simple way to teach your dog to sit. It is called the luring method:
Another way to teach your Border Collie to sit is to use the capture method. In this method you capture dog’s natural behaviour:
Repeat this process over several short training sessions and it will not be long before your puppy is sitting on command.
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
The comments are property of their posters, all the rest Copyright © 2002 - 2011 (elkana) All rights reserved. Elkana Trust.
Use of this website constitutes acceptance of our Terms & Conditions , Privacy Policy and Disclaimer
All images, logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owners.