updalerob 0 Posted October 24, 2016 Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 He was retrieving great something I've done a lot with him but now decided he wants to drop the ball at my feet or if it's a dummy starts chucking it about in the feild any help would be greatful lads Quote Link to post
Wales1234 5,512 Posted October 24, 2016 Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 Mine dogs won't even chase a ball bud he might be getting bored of it 1 Quote Link to post
Havelightforcewilltravel 417 Posted October 24, 2016 Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 Have week off then start from scratch sounds like he either bored or at that funny age,good luck. 1 Quote Link to post
updalerob 0 Posted October 24, 2016 Author Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 Cheers don't think it help a lass bringing around a load of toys and he has been amusing himself for a few days so they've been banned Quote Link to post
nottzhunter08 898 Posted October 24, 2016 Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 Try taking all toys away for a few days, then connect some string to one, chuck it and when drops shorts tug it about he should get hang of it again, good luck Quote Link to post
Casso 1,261 Posted October 24, 2016 Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 The relationship is the key, having the dog comfortable in your space The dummy is causing to much excitement for him to channel it to you , and the ball is been dropped because hes changing his state of mind in your space , just imagine him feeling a certain way when he has the items to himself there is no negative in his near vicinity as he approaches you or you approach him he starts feeling a little pressure a lot or zero pressure it's all in how the dog feels about us Put him on a long line , get 2 of everything , doesn't getanything until he makes contact with you , he gets second when he brings first in , feed him in your space , not out of a bowl , feed in the training area if ya can , make him work for it , make him bark on command again if ya can It releases pressure in the dog Get contact I don't mean sitting on the sofa with the dogs head in your lap sniffing your sac , get contact where it matters in the field , a dog gets a different feeling in a different environment so what he will do in one place don't mean he'll do it in another, that's where it all falls apart , To be honest a tug item is an ideal way of keeping a pup in a tuned in state , it means he can tune in to you channel his energy anywhere , you don't need to keep taking it off him once he comes into your space shake the second at him ,and let him win it every time , this is the point I want to make clear with a pup reluctant to give up item don't focus on it focus on yourself been an exciting place to be , it's not about the perfect hand over , it's about the pup not feeling pressure/ negetive with us is his space and him in ours Trust takes time to build too, what age is the pup , I rarely focus on retrieve, put it this way a little slice of chocolate cake is delicious and leaves you wanting more, too much of the f***ing thing is going to leave you seeing it as toxic matter , it's all work and no play senecio not great for bonding 3 Quote Link to post
Casso 1,261 Posted October 24, 2016 Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 The relationship is the key, having the dog comfortable in your space The dummy is causing to much excitement for him to channel it to you , and the ball is been dropped because hes changing his state of mind in your space , just imagine him feeling a certain way when he has the items to himself there is no negative in his near vicinity as he approaches you or you approach him he starts feeling a little pressure a lot or zero pressure it's all in how the dog feels about us Put him on a long line , get 2 of everything , doesn't getanything until he makes contact with you , he gets second when he brings first in , feed him in your space , not out of a bowl , feed in the training area if ya can , make him work for it , make him bark on command again if ya can It releases pressure in the dog Get contact I don't mean sitting on the sofa with the dogs head in your lap sniffing your sac , get contact where it matters in the field , a dog gets a different feeling in a different environment so what he will do in one place don't mean he'll do it in another, that's where it all falls apart , To be honest a tug item is an ideal way of keeping a pup in a tuned in state , it means he can tune in to you channel his energy anywhere , you don't need to keep taking it off him once he comes into your space shake the second at him ,and let him win it every time , this is the point I want to make clear with a pup reluctant to give up item don't focus on it focus on yourself been an exciting place to be , it's not about the perfect hand over , it's about the pup not feeling pressure/ negetive with us is his space and him in ours Trust takes time to build too, what age is the pup , I rarely focus on retrieve, put it this way a little slice of chocolate cake is delicious and leaves you wanting more, too much of the f***ing thing is going to leave you seeing it as toxic matter , it's all work and no play senecio not great for bonding 1 Quote Link to post
updalerob 0 Posted October 24, 2016 Author Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 6 months now Quote Link to post
Blueboybilly 164 Posted October 24, 2016 Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 Casso is bang on there as far as I am concerned Quote Link to post
wiganred 83 Posted October 24, 2016 Report Share Posted October 24, 2016 That's sound advise I'll take onboard with my pup also Casso... ?? Quote Link to post
billhardy 2,342 Posted October 25, 2016 Report Share Posted October 25, 2016 Some good advice from casso ,the space the hand feeding the bond and relationship of play he willbring item of choice for you to throw play tug etc,give him a choice of dummy's etc.yo yoing on the beam his just that a game of catch retrieve catch retrieve all fun to the animal and much more enjoyed with live game .much in the sames has getting bored with dummy change or put a little jump in the field of play ,when you got him right he will bring dummy etc for the game to comence pushing it in ta ya hands etc ya got him then ,not rocket science just read him and y'all find how ta play him.and on a note don't over do it has in the field leave him wanting more.atb bunnys 1 Quote Link to post
updalerob 0 Posted October 25, 2016 Author Report Share Posted October 25, 2016 Cheers lads great advice from all Quote Link to post
koru 12 Posted October 25, 2016 Report Share Posted October 25, 2016 He was retrieving great something I've done a lot with him but now decided he wants to drop the ball at my feet or if it's a dummy starts chucking it about in the feild any help would be greatful ladsWhat's the cross? Quote Link to post
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