How to TRAIN A Dog To Actually LISTEN To Obedience Commands

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If you want your dog to listen every time you  give a command you need a system to both praise   and correct them first we teach dogs what commands  mean by using a lot of praise and being very clear   in our expectations you need to know exactly  what you want your dog to do in each situation   and then expect them to do it every single time  if you don't expect them to listen every single   time they're going to figure that out very  quickly and they're going to walk all over you   today I'm going to show you our process for  getting your dog to listen every single time   you issue a command basically what we're doing  is proofing their obedience commands all proofing   means is teaching your dog to listen regardless of  the level of distraction when a dog is fairly new   to obedience training we start everything on leash  and we work from the heel position Bruce knows his   commands but I've never worked with him before  so you're going to see a lot of success today   but also some corrections so first let me show  you what heeling looks like Bruce heel so as I   tell them heel Bruce heel I expect him ears even  with my heel so what I want Bruce heel heel his   ears even with my heel and I want Bruce basically  focused forward anytime he's out of position Bruce   heel I'll give a little tug whichever way I need  him to go so if Bruce is ahead of me I'll give a   little tug straight back in tell him heel and if I  lose his attention too much I'll give a correction   I don't care if he glances at things briefly  but if he starts kind of pulling offline I'll   give a little tug the way I need him to go on a  left turn in front of the dog I want to be able   to basically pivot on a dime and tell him Bruce  heel and go back the way I come from came from   if he does great I'll praise him if not I would  just give a little tug Bruce heel to slow him   down so you can see right there a quick little  tug on a right turn Bruce heel come buddy heel   I'm going to Pat my leg and ask him to come with  me if he comes with I will praise Him Bruce heel   come on buddy he'll if he doesn't I'll give a  little tug to get him moving again Bruce heel   come on buddy kill there you go and you can see  even how I hold the leash is important so I don't   want you to wrap up really tightly on the leash  like this the goal is that this collar is never   tight so if you see the chain up like that it's a  problem the chain should always be down and loose   so anytime you need to give a little correction  and then loosen up again so now to start with the   sit command when I ask him to sit I'm going to say  his name first followed by the word sit Bruce sit   good boy so you just saw a perfect set I said his  name as I came to a stop and I told him sit and   he did it so of course I gave him some praise but  let's talk about what to do if he doesn't listen   properly with all of our obedience we really  believe in Once A dog knows their commands no   Second Chances so I'm not going to beg him to sit  so what I would do Bruce heel if I were to come to   a stop and ask him to sit and he ignored me I'm  not going to negotiate I'm not going to beg him   if I were to tell him Bruce sit and he just stood  there and ignored me all I would get do is give   a little tug straight up and tell him sit I'm  not going to pull tightly I'm not going to hold   it would just be a quick little tug as I tell him  sit he's got a little itch I'll give him a second   and then Bruce heel come on pal so now as we train  timing is important and when I say timing I mean   your timing we have to help the dog out so what  I don't want you to do is surprise him so you've   seen a couple pretty good sits from Bruce in a row  I I want you to help your dog when you're working   with him so let me show you what I don't want you  to do Bruce sit so there he did but notice he's   out of the heel position so when we ask our dog to  sit we want him sitting right at our side like he   was earlier here we could say Bruce messed up but  in reality I messed up I didn't give him any time   right I came to a stop out of nowhere I surprised  him and out of nowhere I say Bruce said of course   he's going to end up in front of me if he sits  at all he's doing pretty well because this is   outside of the norm he doesn't know what's  expected of him so I want to show you now   proper timing as I come to a stop I'm going to be  talking before I stop so right now as I'm walking   I will say Bruce sit and then there it took a  little bit of leash pressure so now you saw he   ignored I'm gonna give him a little tug and tell  him sit so just like that I ask him to sit if he   does great if not a quick little tug and tell him  sit Bruce heel so now we're going to do another   third time I would like to use no leash pressure  whatsoever so I would like to be able to let go   with my left hand and say Bruce sit and have  him stop perfectly you can see he didn't there   that means he's relying on the leash pressure  Bruce sit so there I'll give a little tug he'll   and now I'm going to go ahead  and do another one heel Bruce sit   good boy and of course praise for a job well done  now let's move on to sit stay so Sit Stay is a   pretty easy command for a dog in a situation  like this although we're outside there's not   much happening so most likely if he were to  break it it would just be to casually walk off   what I'm going to do and of course never drop  the leash if you don't trust your dog I do trust   Bruce even though I didn't work with him he's well  enough trying to know he's not going to bolt from   me so I'm going to tell him to stay Bruce stay  and I'm going to say it once and only once so   I'm not going to repeat it I'm not going to make  eye contact with him the entire time I'm going to   expect him to be good if he makes a mistake that's  okay so if he were to get up the first thing I   would do is Mark that with a no immediately so if  he jumped up I would say no and I would turn to   him and I would make direct eye contact with  him and I'm going to use my body language to   hopefully stop him I'm not going to say no and  stand here so here he got up no so there you can   see he looked at me right away and that's the goal  oh he's chewing some gum that stuck to the ground   there I told him no and now I'm going to take him  back to where he was and tell him Bruce sit stay   so one tug for sit and one for stay so the idea  is he broke two commands a sit and a stay so he   got a correction for each one and I put him right  back by the gum so if he wants to get up and have   another chew at it he can try that so once again  if he breaks it first thing we do mark it with a   no use some body language here so don't like I was  saying a moment ago don't say no and just stare at   him or quietly walk to him say no make eye contact  as you walk to him and you want your energy on the   dog and then when you get them take them right  back to where he was and then correct each   command he broke one for sit and one for stay if  he does well of course we are going to praise him   Bruce free what a good boy so we use the free  Command I told him free and I praise him for a   job well done very good my little buddy yes you're  a good boy all right so now let's see that with   some distractions so we are back with a squeaky  tennis ball I expect mistakes here I can't imagine   that Bruce is going to be able to hold and resist  this so if I think he's going to make mistakes I   set myself up for Success so I'm not going to take  this and throw it that direction because he no so   there I mark it with a no and now I walk him right  back to where he was hey heel Bruce sit stay one   tug for each broken command like I was saying I'm  not going to throw this over his head because if   he runs for it now I'm gonna have to chase the dog  and he's probably a little quicker than me so I'm   going to start easy I want to be in a position  that if he breaks it I can stop him easily no so I cut in front I'll tell him no Bruce  heel hey heel Bruce heel come on sit stay and now we're gonna do it again we can  see he has a lot of interest on this ball so that one was about the same difficulty  as last time I need to you know work until   I get success so that went well so now  I'm going to make it a little bit harder   no Bruce so I tell them no right away hey  Phil first heel Bruce set so now set you   can see he's crooked because he's focused on  where that ball was what I'll do is just kind   of nudge here just to get him facing  uh forward in the heel position stay no Bruce so now Bruce sit if he were to stay  in position stay I wouldn't I wouldn't have to   take him back anywhere so if he immediately sat  back down I would still give the corrections but   I would just tell him sit and stay in position  now the hardness of your tugs depends both on   your dog and on what they did wrong some  dogs are very timid they should you need   a much softer voice for them and of course a  softer correction some dogs are a little bit   more stubborn and need a harder correction it  also depends on what he does so if I tell him   no and he looks up at me and his ears go back a  little bit and he stops that's going to be a much   softer correction than if I told him no and he  bolted right Bolton is dangerous it's incredibly   dangerous for the dog so I want them to learn  very quickly they can never get away with that so there the reason I don't repeat the command  is I sure thought he was going to make a mistake   right there it looked like he was going to get  up I wanted to tell him stay but I gave him that   chance to mess up and he did well so his level of  focus on the ball is not a problem it's great that   he's interested in it I just want to make sure  that when he's no Bruce so that right there is why   we tell them no and hopefully you notice as soon  as he heard no and his name Bruce heel he stopped   that's great of course Bruce heel so now I'm  going to give those Corrections Bruce hey sit stay   and we're going to go ahead and do that again   but I love the fact that he heard  his name he stopped and he cared so that time he did great my goal is to be able  to pick up the leash here without him getting up   and when he's done well tell him Bruce free  that's a good boy look at you so now we're   going to move on to the down command Bruce knows  down but I've actually never asked it of him so   I don't know what to expect here what I do expect  though of course is that when I say down he lays   down immediately at my side basically uh facing  forward hopefully he can do that but if he doesn't   you'll see the correction process so now I'm  going to tell them Bruce down and I give a nice   Point straight down he ignored me so I'm going to  tell him down with a little tug he's on my foot so   I'm just going to nudge him off a little bit and  I'm not going to praise there because he didn't   listen right away he knows the command better than  that he's just not in tune with me yet Bruce heel so now we're going to do that again heel Bruce  zip nice set so there he was about to sit and   then chose not to so I gave a little tug  again I'm going to tell them Bruce down okay down so he thought about it but he didn't  go all the way down so I just gave a little tug   down and poured it here to never pull the dog  so you'll never see me some trainers kind of   step on the leash to pull them down or they'll  you know put constant pressure on the leash I   don't believe in that whatsoever it's a quick  tug it's not to force him into position it's   to tell them hey you messed up it catches  his attention and reminds him of what he's   supposed to do Bruce heel so now we're going to  do this again heel there's a boy heel Bruce sit Bruce down so there he's halfway down I'm going to  tell him down with a little tug and I   also see he's got this habit of laying into  me it might look really cute trust me with a   full grown Rottweiler that's not going to  be cute if he's going into your leg like   this each time so what I'll do is I'm going  to kind of nudge his butt out a little bit   and then I'm just going to shape and kind  of correct here and show him this is what   it this is what I'm going for and if this  takes a few tries that's okay Bruce heel so there's no magic number right now for how  quickly he should do it because it's just   dependent on how he's feeling and his level  of training Bruce sit sit so there he got a   little tug for set because he was leading  me and wasn't stopping quickly Bruce down so that was better he's went down so  I'm going to praise him he's into me a   little bit not as much as earlier but you  can still kind of give this little push   and the idea is we don't want him getting  comfortable with the idea of laying down   and being against my leg the entire  time so I just gently nudged him away   we often get asked how much time is acceptable for  the dog like how much time do they have to listen   and I'll usually tell someone you'll know does  it feel awkward like you're just standing there   staring at the dog you've issued the command  and you are kind of looking around like is he   ever going to do it that's too long so probably a  couple seconds so it could be one one thousand two   one thousand and if he hasn't done it then use  your correction but also know your dog if you   have a 10 year old Mastiff and they do everything  slow well then I'm going to allow him to lay down   a lot slower if you have a eight month old Jack  Russell who operates at you know 100 every single   second and you tell him down and he's looking over  his shoulder at a squirrel I'm going to correct   instantly because he's not paying attention so  it really depends on the dog Bruce heel good boy good boy buddy so now we're going to  go ahead and do another Down Bruce sip   sit and we can see when I come this way  the reason he's not sitting as nicely   is because his owner's behind the camera so  he's excited to get to her and you just have   to know your dog and know what makes them tick  so sometimes a dog will walk One Direction and   they're perfect and they don't do well the  other direction maybe they want to go home   and it's that way or maybe they want to  go to the park and it's that way so you   can figure that stuff out pretty quickly and of  course he likes walking to his owner Bruce down so he stopped to itch Bruce down when  that happens I'm just going to give a   little tug he was sitting there he wasn't  itchy until he heard a command so if I   tell him down and all of a sudden they're  itchy I'm still going to correct Bruce heel   and this once again goes back to know your dog  if your dog never ever itches and everyone's sick   once a year they do it when you issue the down  command it's not a problem of course Bruce sit but   if they have a habit of itching every single time  you say down you know that's an issue Bruce down that's a good boy there you go good so as  I ask him to down notice I'm giving a point   because we have never worked together before so  through time I'm going to get rid of that point   we've got a skid steer backing up over there  I don't know if you can hear that if it's   distracting but that's perfect we're in public  we need him to listen in public of course but   there I gave that point through time I'll phase  it out so right now I'm telling them down like   that after a day of working with him I might  be doing this and after another couple days   I'm doing this and after another few days I'm  just saying his name and saying down the goal   is right now we make it easy on him and then as he  gets better we have higher and higher expectations   so now let's talk about the downstay command Bruce  stay very similar to sit stay so I say stay once   and only once and expect him to do it and now  I want you to think through what my correction   might be so let's think back to sit stay if he  breaks it I tell him no immediately I walk him   back to where he was and then one tug for sit and  one for stay to us the down stay is just one more   command I asked him to sit down and then stay so  if he were to break this I would immediately mark   it with a no I would take him back to where he  was and then you would just see me tell them sit   with a tug up down with the tug down and stay to  the side so just three quick tugs just like that   and I would walk off and try it again so he's  doing well generally downstay is going to be   easier than a Sit Stay if your dog is proficient  it down and the reason is it's just harder for   them to get up it takes a lot more effort so now  we're going to work a lot of distractions in the   background here but now we're going to work with  the ball again I expect this to go better than the   Sit Stay and thank you maybe he'll prove me wrong  we'll see but generally speaking all things being   equal the downstay is going to be better because  it just takes a lot more effort for him to get up oh so once he's done well at that we can make it a  little bit harder since he corrected himself I   don't know if I was blocking the view or not he  went to sit up and he stopped on his own before   I said anything so I'm not going to correct  that I'm going to make it harder I'm going to   throw it over him anytime until you've kind of  internalized all of this until you understand   it really well think about what you're going to  do before you do it so if I throw this over his   head and he jumps up I'll mark it with a no  immediately hopefully he stops if he doesn't   I'll go get him I'll take him back to where he  was and I'll give all three of those Corrections and he did perfect I don't care that he thought  about biting it there if he could have snatched   that out of the air without getting up  more power to him that's absolutely fine so when he's in a downstay I don't expect him  to be a robot I don't care that he's looking at   this I don't care that he wants it if I rolled  it past him and he could snatch it real quick   and grab it that's absolutely fine we're not  looking to get rid of his interest in the ball   all we want is that when he's in this command he's  willing to wait until we tell him that he's free   Bruce free there you go pal and of course he  can have the ball we're going to keep working   in the downstay for a minute I would love  for you to see what a correction looks like   so I'm going to keep making this harder  until hopefully he makes a little mistake but he is being the goodest boy right now so I'm thinking he is not going to break one so  let's just talk one more time what that would   look like if he broke it I would mark it with a no  walk him right back to where he was and then you   would see three tugs sit down stay now a question  we get sometimes here is what if he doesn't listen   to those Corrections if you need more than  one that's fine so if you told him sit with a   tug and then down with a tug and he ignored you  because he was focused on the ball or something   else it might look like this you might have to  tell him sit down and they ignore you and then   again down and if he ignores you even a third down  until he finally does and then a tug for stay if   your dog's not proficient at down then of course  you shouldn't be working on the down state yet   all right on to the last and hardest command  come so we're going to start Unleashed right   now unleash is usually pretty easy but of course  the goal is your dog will listen off leash in   every situation I'm going to show you a lot of  unleash stuff today I'm going to show you the   corrections but we have other videos as well that  could be helpful to you so when I call him I'm   always going to use his name first and then I'm  going to say come so when he's three feet away   it might not seem needed but picture he's racing  around the backyard if I say maybe you have two   or three dogs so if I say come and then Bruce  he might you know tune into the word Bruce and   then think yeah hey what do you need from me so  I always want the opposite I want Bruce and then   the word comes so here's his name and then the  word come as soon as he gets up I praise him and   the phrase I use is I praise him all the way in I  don't care whether he's three feet away or 300 as   soon as he starts coming I praise I tell him good  boy there's my go there's my guy whatever it can   be nonsense just happy nonsense right just praise  him all the way in when he gets to me I'm going   to ask him to sit when he gets there once he's  done that once he's finished the command that   then I will praise him so that's what come looks  like let's talk through the correction I've never   told him to come before and once again he knows  this command to be clear this is not a fresh dog   who's never been trained before he knows it but  he's never done it with me so let's say I tell   him come and he just ignores me he just sits  right there and looks at me you would see me   say no immediately and I would go get him when I  get there I would grab my leash and I would back   up and I would correct him so we'll hopefully  see this in a moment but if he ignored me I   would then back up and I would tell him come come  sit so one tug for come one another one for come   and then a third one for sit I'm going to start  unleash because my goal is this is easy for him   hopefully so now I'm going to get to the end of  the leash I'm not gonna reel him in like a fish   I'm going to talk to him and I'm going to praise  him in Bruce come good boy little buddy good sit   good so that was pretty darn good there you go  he's a little bit distracted by his owner over   there and that's okay good boy Bruce heel you  probably noticed I backed up Bruce heel as I   was calling him that motion just helps kind of  get his attention on Me Through Time Brazil I   don't want to have to do that and through time  I won't have to do that but since that's the   first time I called him backing up helps a lot  just to get his attention more on me Bruce sit good boy stay I'm gonna go ahead and call him  again same deal gonna say his name with come I'm   going to back up and I'm going to praise him you  can choke up on the leash nothing wrong with that   but just don't drag him to you I'll show you what  I mean Bruce come good boy you can kind of Choke   up a little bit good sip so now this time he got  to me and he sat but look how crooked he is he's   focused that way I'm going to do something to get  his attention on me you have a couple options you   could push his butt out and turn him so it could  look like this and just kind of gently turn them   this can be very awkward uh so some people have  trouble doing that but that's certainly one option   another would be if he was crooked like this you  can take the collar and just kind of tell him hey   Bruce come and just kind of turn them this way  you don't want to be fighting with him on this so   you're just trying to get him to turn his body to  face you and if all else fails you can just kind   of reset so what I mean by that is if you told  him come and all of a sudden he's like this facing   completely the other direction he's no longer in  front of you you could just say hey Bruce come   and even use a hand to stop them and then  have them sit so there's a lot of ways to   achieve this the point being when he finishes  the come command he needs to be facing you not   thinking about the dog back there not turn this  way to see the skid steer over there I want him   generally facing me we can see right now he's  directed a little bit to his owner this goes   back to knowing your dog and knowing you  know what they're doing I would be a lot   more worried about this if he was staring down  a squirrel right now looking at his owner is   not such a big deal but if he's too crooked  I will just turn him and then I will praise   him you know for finishing the command good boy  and then we'll do it again you ready buddy heel   okay so going back to the beginning of the video  I mentioned that we expect Perfection so I expect   perfection in the sense of that's what I'm  striving for but I know I'm not going to get   it today right that'd be pretty unreasonable  to think Bruce would be absolutely perfect for   me on day one but it doesn't mean I can't try  so that's what I want out of you when you're   training your dog try to get Perfection  and through time you will but we have to   have high expectations also knowing that they're  going to make mistakes and that's okay Bruce sit stay we're back by that gum and he's intrigued by  it so now this time I'm going to call him without   holding the leash same exact rules apply you  just might see the correction this time because   this is a heck of a lot harder and he might stop  at that gum on the way to give it a little chew Bruce come come on little buddy so  here he ignored me I'll tell him no   and now I'm gonna grab my leash I'm going to  back up and tell them first sit sit I'm sorry   come come sit I was distracted there laughing  about what's going on in the background and   also uh him going back for the gum so you  know own your mistakes and recognize it   when there's a lot going on you're gonna  make mistakes and that's okay the goal   is you catch yourself and you fix it the next  time but we're gonna try that again Bruce sip   stay so you can see he's already looking at that  gum thinking about it must be his favorite flavor   Bruce come come on little buddy oh here he ignored  again I'll tell him no and now I'm gonna tell him   come come sit and we can see a little bit crooked  so I'm just gonna turn that butt and get him to   look at me for a moment and then he'll we're  gonna try that again he gets a lot of Praise if   he does it well and he's not going to get a lot  of Praise if he messes up of course Bruce said   stay so like I said I've never worked with them  before I can always go back a step and say hey   maybe drop in Alicia's too much right now so  let's go back a step and try to get some success   so I'm going to use the leash in my hand Bruce  come good boy there you go good sit so now we've   got pretty crooked set he's focused that way  if you notice it also took a little pressure   on the leash to get him moving so that wasn't  a great example of what comes should look like   but that is a great example of what you're going  to encounter during the training process hey Phil Bruce sit good boy stay so now I'm  going to hopefully get a good one here   Bruce come good good little  buddy there you go good Bruce sit   so they're pretty good I'm definitely  going to praise that one I'm just going   to correct and get what I want and get him  sitting facing me good boy kill and we're   gonna do that again so this is just a numbers  game doesn't matter how many tries it takes   Bruce sip here I'm just gonna fix that sloppy  sit a little bit and kind of nudge him off of me   and if he were to lay down here I would just  reset and get him back to the sit position   stay I'm going to try another one off leash  or the leash dropped and see if he can do it   Bruce come good boy there you go buddy Bruce sit  good so if you noticed that time before I called   him I gave a little whistle just to catch his  attention I'm trying to make this easy on him   because I want success I gave him a lot of praise  and I kind of backed up a little bit I'm just   trying to make it easy so I can praise him for  a job well done so now let's talk a little bit   more about mistakes and what to do there's only  a few options that he could do so now Bruce sit   good boy down so here he ignored the down  I'm going to tell him down with a little tug stay so now when we call the dog there's only a  few options he could come to me and then I praise   the heck out of him and that's great another  option is he could ignore me completely now in   real life you're probably not called in your dog  from a downstay this is a teaching thing but once   we get past this we work on come when they're free  but for right now he could ignore me completely   so all I would do there is that that correction  I talked about earlier I would tell them no I'd   go all the way to him I'd pick up my leash and I  would tell him come come sit it's also very likely   that he's going to do something else right he's  either going to walk or run away so picture he's   just already free in the yard walking around if  we're doing that we'll probably have a short tab   on him and it's just a short little leash like  this so if he was wandering around then I told   him come and he ignored me I would tell him no  but let's say he did something besides just later   let's say he ran off so maybe he plays Catch Me  If You Can and does Some Loops maybe he just goes   to the back door or if you're in the house maybe  he runs upstairs doesn't really matter the second   he proves he's not listening to you tell him no  go to him wherever three years but now forget   about where he started and forget about where  you started so when he doesn't listen to come   he didn't break a stay right I'm not taking him  back to the spot stay is about the spot come is   about me come is about you as the owner right  so if you call the dog to you and he runs all   the way upstairs go up there and get him so you  would tell him no you'd March upstairs follow him   to wherever it is he's gone when you get there  if there was a leash on grab that if they have   a short training lead grab that if it's just  their cloth collar that's fine too wherever   you get them is where you'd correct them and then  you would back up and tell them come come sit and   then you would tell them free and you would do it  again that's an important part of this you have   to work until you have some measure of success so  we see a lot of clients where the dogs don't like   to come in from the backyard so the client says  you know Ralph come and the dog doesn't listen so   they tell them no they go out there they find  Ralph they get them they might tell them come   come sit and then they walk inside and they think  hey I did it and what I'll tell them is you did   part of it right you corrected the one time he  didn't listen and that's great and he did your   correction perfectly but did Ralph ever listen  in the backyard and the answer is no he didn't   right so what I'd much rather see you do is give  that correction that come come sit and then tell   them free and just kick him loose again right  let him run through the yard and do his thing   and 10 seconds later call him again and however  many tries it takes you it doesn't matter work   until you have some success you want to get to  the point to where he finally did listen in that   moment and you can praise him for a job well done  and he gets used to listening right then if you're   working in something too hard and you're having  only failure think back to what I did with uh   um Bruce here I struggled for his name for  a second um think back to what I did with   Bruce here I called him a couple times at the  leash dropped and it didn't go well so I made   it easier I picked up the least I thought this  is too hard for him we've never done it before   so I used the leash got a couple of good ones  in that way and then I dropped the leash so   if you're having to correct your dog five six  seven eight times in a row that's probably an   issue and that means what you're working on might  be too hard take a step back get some success and   then make it harder again the key to all of this  is to be 100 consistent so those Corrections you   saw today notice they weren't harsh they weren't  scary they weren't mean so the corrections alone   are not enough for your dog to listen every single  time they also have to know they're not going to   get away with not listening so your dog needs to  know every single time they break a command every   single time they ignore you you're gonna go get  them and make them listen to the command and they   figure out pretty quickly they have two options if  they don't listen they get a little correction and   they have to do it or if they do listen they get a  lot of Praise it's a pretty easy decision so once   they figure out you're consistent they're going  to be great you just have to have a knowledge of   what you expect of them be consistent in your  expectations every time follow through every   single time and they're going to do well thanks  for watching and have fun training your dog
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Channel: Suburban K9 Dog Training
Views: 4,587
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Keywords: Dog training, Dog Bootcamp, In home training, dog trainer, puppy training, suburban k9, suburban k-9, dog obedience training, puppy training tips, dog training advice, dog training tips, how to train puppy, puppy training advice, proofing dog training, proofing obedience commands, dog training videos, get dog to listen, teach dog to listen when distracted, stop dog ignoring you, how to teach dog obedience at home, training dog to obey commands
Id: 5HUAM9UUgXc
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Length: 30min 18sec (1818 seconds)
Published: Wed Jun 21 2023
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