cantona 310 Posted December 19, 2015 Report Share Posted December 19, 2015 Been teaching my pup( 8months old )to quarter as she runs on to far when I let go of her horse lead, she does change direction well when she hears the whistle but still keeps to far ahead, any way to stop this apart from constantly calling her back? Quote Link to post
deck 35 Posted December 19, 2015 Report Share Posted December 19, 2015 keep her close from the start dont let her run on to far,then use your whistle to change direction but again keeping her close,have you done all the basic training with her first. Quote Link to post
cantona 310 Posted December 20, 2015 Author Report Share Posted December 20, 2015 keep her close from the start dont let her run on to far,then use your whistle to change direction but again keeping her close,have you done all the basic training with her first. I've done sitting or stoping, recall with the whistle and retrieve tennis ball and dummy Quote Link to post
deck 35 Posted December 20, 2015 Report Share Posted December 20, 2015 ok,it might be worth you getting a spaniel training dvd or look on you tube there's a few training clips on there. Quote Link to post
Flairball 141 Posted January 5, 2016 Report Share Posted January 5, 2016 When she is at the distance you want her to turn at, hit the whistle, and change direction so she's got to turn to get back infront of you. That's what I'd do. Also, before you turn her, roll in a freshly killed pigeon so that she finds it both near you, and going the direction you want to be going. The idea being that she starts to associate finding birds near you, not far from you. I like to start my dogs quartering as early as I can, usually as soon as I get them home. Rather than actually train them to quarter, I condition them to. If you walk a zig-zag pattern with a 16-28month old pup enough it'll just be normal for the pup to zig-zag/ quartet. Quote Link to post
04fox8 168 Posted January 6, 2016 Report Share Posted January 6, 2016 When she is at the distance you want her to turn at, hit the whistle, and change direction so she's got to turn to get back infront of you. That's what I'd do. Also, before you turn her, roll in a freshly killed pigeon so that she finds it both near you, and going the direction you want to be going. The idea being that she starts to associate finding birds near you, not far from you. I like to start my dogs quartering as early as I can, usually as soon as I get them home. Rather than actually train them to quarter, I condition them to. If you walk a zig-zag pattern with a 16-28month old pup enough it'll just be normal for the pup to zig-zag/ quartet. When she is at the distance you want her to turn at, hit the whistle, and change direction so she's got to turn to get back infront of you. That's what I'd do. Also, before you turn her, roll in a freshly killed pigeon so that she finds it both near you, and going the direction you want to be going. The idea being that she starts to associate finding birds near you, not far from you. I like to start my dogs quartering as early as I can, usually as soon as I get them home. Rather than actually train them to quarter, I condition them to. If you walk a zig-zag pattern with a 16-28month old pup enough it'll just be normal for the pup to zig-zag/ quartet. I started my pup in a similar way from the start. Walking zig - zag and tooting the whistle. On a long rope, she will do this all day long........ But take of the rope and it's a different story, which I'm now trying to recover from. Quote Link to post
Flairball 141 Posted January 8, 2016 Report Share Posted January 8, 2016 I started my pup in a similar way from the start. Walking zig - zag and tooting the whistle. On a long rope, she will do this all day long........ But take of the rope and it's a different story, which I'm now trying to recover from. Unfortunately that is a different issue altogether. Good luck. Quote Link to post
jok 3,244 Posted January 8, 2016 Report Share Posted January 8, 2016 Get any book you can written by Joe Irvine. The most inspired spaniel man on the planet when it comes to training. I remember one of his best sayings. 'when on the lead your spaniel is at rest. When off the lead he must be under control'. Won puppy open field test and RU in full blown trial. Hope that helps. 1 Quote Link to post
04fox8 168 Posted January 13, 2016 Report Share Posted January 13, 2016 Get any book you can written by Joe Irvine. The most inspired spaniel man on the planet when it comes to training. I remember one of his best sayings. 'when on the lead your spaniel is at rest. When off the lead he must be under control'. Won puppy open field test and RU in full blown trial. Hope that helps. That's the only thing left for me to do. Quote Link to post
jok 3,244 Posted January 15, 2016 Report Share Posted January 15, 2016 Gave you a giggle didn't it? Quote Link to post
Bradford Lad 74 Posted February 10, 2016 Report Share Posted February 10, 2016 The pup has to get rewarded close to you, ie cast the dog off and drop a ball in front of you when dog cant see. Work the dog around you unitl it finds the ball, plenty of praise and keep it going. The dog will then associate rewards are close to you and 20yds in front!! Quote Link to post
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