Jump to content

Jumping Dogs


Recommended Posts


  • Replies 69
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Popular Posts

Start with tiny obstacles. Always use the same command. Give plenty of praise and encouragement. You could try throwing tasty titbits over the obstacle if it's a reluctant jumper. Walk away from you

here's a few you'll of seen before of my lot jumping.

I never put any pics up on this thread but you know me, any excuse               and car crash  

Posted Images

Start with tiny obstacles. Always use the same command. Give plenty of praise and encouragement.

You could try throwing tasty titbits over the obstacle if it's a reluctant jumper.

Walk away from your dog, providing the obstacle is not too big, the dog will be desparate to follow and should jump to get to you.

Don't overface it by expecting it to jump pig netting topped with barbed wire immediately.. Work up to that only when the dog is jumping consistently and easily clearing the top of the obstacle.

Give your dog lots of different jumps. You might find a dog will jump a five bar gate but refuse a pig netting fence.

Keep on mixing them up until it's confident about any obstacle.

Some love to jump, others are not so confident. Work with what you've got, try and instil confidence if needed.

Never lose your temper, if you're dog refuses a jump it's not being stubborn just unsure of itself.

  • Like 9
Link to post

Another one from me is that after the tiny puppy stages of plank wood etc, get yourself a bit of chicken wire, you can stretch it to any size low or high and follow the steps Jukel said. Jumping wire discourages dogs from putting their feet on top when they jump as that can cause all sorts of problems in the field, especially with barbed wire.

 

One other thing is not to over match a puppy, the growth plates and bones are still forming so long landings can cause damage. Once you have a keen young jumper, of any low height, don't keep upping the bar at puppy stage, be patient, the balls rolling... Keep it fun. :yes:

Link to post

Start with tiny obstacles. Always use the same command. Give plenty of praise and encouragement.

You could try throwing tasty titbits over the obstacle if it's a reluctant jumper.

Walk away from your dog, providing the obstacle is not too big, the dog will be desparate to follow and should jump to get to you.

Don't overface it by expecting it to jump pig netting topped with barbed wire immediately.. Work up to that only when the dog is jumping consistently and easily clearing the top of the obstacle.

Give your dog lots of different jumps. You might find a dog will jump a five bar gate but refuse a pig netting fence.

Keep on mixing them up until it's confident about any obstacle.

Some love to jump, others are not so confident. Work with what you've got, try and instil confidence if needed.

Never lose your temper, if you're dog refuses a jump it's not being stubborn just unsure of itself.

Good advice pal :thumbs:

Link to post

stand a baby near a gate and explain to the dog that it will get bollocked if it lands on the baby :laugh:

 

I started by encouraging mine to jump fairly low turnstiles at first just to build her confidence and then when she was fully grown did a couple of jumps over low gates and then normal gates. She jumps them fine now. Annoyingly though she won't jump a gate when chasing quarry.....fences etc. fine, but for some reason she just won't jump a gate unless I'm there to tell her to :huh:

post-39567-0-63203600-1361302448_thumb.jpg

Link to post

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.


×
×
  • Create New...