Postby goosebruce » Wed Jan 01, 2003 1:30 pm
DH, nobody especially me called you an idiot. In fact I never said anything of the sort. Your example of a spiked birdie harness and a treat to teach sit is perfect.. because they are both crutches. That dog that sits for treats will come across a time he WON'T sit. Yes, it's learned behavior... but it will not overcome the dog's will. That dog that sits for a treat won't sit at 40 yards for that treat... he won't sit when he's breaking on a bird for that treat, or when chasing a cat or anything that his will is stronger than that treat. Therefore, that treat is a crutch to keep from teaching your dog to sit. He'll sit sometimes, but he won't when he needs to the most, and he never will completely, because it's not been trained to the point he knows he must. Same with the birdie harness. He might not chomp today, or tommorrow, or maybe forever with a duck (or whatever you used in the harness), but does he truely understand HOLD, therefore can always be counted to do it? A crutch is anything you use to keep from actually training a concept. The difference between puppy training and dog training.
Read the orignal post... A 3 year old dog, with mouth problems, and now won't go because of an ill timed correction. What's the hurry to fix this problem for a while, or teach it where it will never come up again? What's more fair to the dog, a gimmick or teaching it?
Just because someone doesn't agree with a statement, doesn't mean they don't agree with you. Maybe your new to here, maybe the net, I don't know, but this median doesn't always translate well. I assure you, I meant nothing but to educate, not to degrade. And btw, I do happen to know everything, so it's a real drag living in an unperfect world... hehe.
FF is more than a dog picking up something at your feet. Dogs don't think like people, or work like people. A dog wants to please you (well, most do) but the want to please you will not overcome their own will, just like that scooby snackto sit when a better offer comes along won't. There will be a time a dog decides he's working (or not working) on his own. Hunt one enough, train one enough, be around dogs, and you will see this. All the desire in the world to go get a bird has nothing to do with a dog that suddenly decides he doesn't want to go get a bird for whatever reason. All of a sudden, his will overcomes his desire. It might be an illtimed correction like the orignal poster made, or it might be cold water, or it might be any number of things... What do you do to a nonforced dog? Nothing. You might correct him, but he doesn't know why. You might beg or plead him, maybe even happy him up a little and maybe get him going again, only to have the problem again and recur time after time. Progress stops when you regress. You have no way to make that dog go, and that has nothing driving him but his own will, and a dog's will isn't always the same as yours. FF, not only gives you complete control of a dogs mouth, it also makes fetch an enforced command. It makes go just as enforceable as stop or come. It makes the very ideal of forcing a dog to go almost not there, because once a dog understands (theirs that word again) he has an obligation to go, just like he has an obligation to follow every command given, he doesn't think not going is an option. He won't give up on a marked bird that he can't find, because when you sent him, he knew it was his job to get that bird. His job... not just his will. His will adds to that obligation, and without both you won't get very far. You can't do much with just a dogs will, nor with just obligation, but the both of them together are amazaing.
So know you got a dog that UNDERSTANDS his part of this. He UNDERSTANDS what HOLD means, what FETCH means, and he understands the corrections if he chooses to not obey. These problems, and set backs, don't happen to a dog that UNDERSTANDS. They happen to a dog that someone (and usually on accident or by not knowing) got the desired responce and thought their dog knows it. A dog that truely understands something, understands it anytime they see it. How many of these threads say, my dog sits in the yard fine, but if there are other dogs there, he won't sit? Do you think that dog understands sit? Or is simply sitting when its his will? What about the dog that breaks hunting, but wont in the yard? Because he sits when its convient to him, when his will overcomes a condtioned responce to sit, he breaks. If he truely understood sit, he'd sit. All the time, everytime. If he truely understood hold, he'd hold all the time, everytime. If he truely understands fetch, he will always go, and always pick up whatever directed too. All the time, everytime.
The orginal poster said he dog mouthed birds, got corrected, and then wouldn't go. If the dog was force fetched, the dog could have been corrected for the mouthing, and if he no go'd it could have been dealt with immedately, before it became a big deal. Right there on the spot, dog would be made to go, and after that, he'd go. Just like he was before. Instead, this dog got a correction he didn't understand, and now wont go. And the more times he doesn't go, the tougher it is to get him to go.
Anything you take the time to make things black and white for a dog he can understand, and he can understand it quite quickly. There are a lot of times other ways to do things to a dog, but to me at least, nothing is as fair as making a dog understand it. When a dog understands it, he's making the right choices and learning through sucess, instead of fear or worry. Dog's don't work well when they are scared.
My final gem of knowledge on force fetch and the thought that dogs have fetch bred into them, therefore ff doesn't make sense... is that every dog, no matter the breeding, sits on his own. Since it's real nice to be able to have them sit when we want them too, we teach them sit as an enforceable command. Fetching is as important as sitting, so only makes sense you'd want control over that now doesn't it?
Best training is a duck hole? Naw. Duck season is 60 days a year. You can train all year. It's fun for you and your dog. Why wait until you have something better to do, like duck hunt to finally try to teach your dog something? With proper training, your dogs first duck hunt should be old school to him, and he becomes an assett out of the gate, instead of 3 or 4 years later.
Trained dogs and hunting dogs? Why should their be a difference? Sure everyone doesn't have to have a full tilt boogey dog, but shouldn't everyone have an obedient willing retreiver? Did anyone on here buy their dog with the thought of having anything else? Nobody on here bought their dog with the ideal it'd have problems, and regardless of plans for their dogs, nobody on here should have to hunt with a problem dog. I bought into that mentailty once, and had a big fat yeller dog that was a pain in the ass to take around because of it. Sure she got my ducks, a $#!+ load of them, but it was often ugly, and always smelly. She wasn't born a whining disobedient mess, I made her that way. And most of her sure nuff training was on the job... Not a way to make a duck dog in my opinion now that I've had both. travis