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COUNTER CRUISING
by Dea Jaffey
Copyright June, 2004 -
Several of my students have asked how to manage
a dog that jumps on the counter when the owner is either in or out
of the room, and clears all the contents. Owners try to put the
contents on the counter to the back but the dog finds a way to remove
anything that is left on the counter. The dogs seem to grow front
paws that have extensions that reach to the back of the counter.
A dog in its natural state is a food scavenger.
It will eat many items that we as humans would deem totally inappropriate.
I would not eat the foil cover to a polident tablet, or cellophane
on a bag of popcorn. My puppy thinks these items are fair game.
There are several methods that could be utilized
to get the behavior you want. The First experience has the most
power to change behavior. When a dog is rewarded with the food off
of the counter, he is strongly motivated to continue.
- Try leaving a high value tasty tidbit on the counter’s edge
– put 3-4 empty pop cans that have pennies in them (tape the
cans shut with duct tape) on top of a sheet of newspaper. When
the dog’s paws reach for the tidbit, the cans fall down first
and startle the dog. This will also alert you that the dog is
clearing the counters.
- There are even devices called snappy trainers that have
large rubber bases with a snap mechanism similar to a mousetrap
that could be left on the counter.
- A personal alarm system can be bought at a local Radio Shack
store that has a pin in it that is removable or a button that
can be pushed to sound an alarm. You can watch from around a
corner, waiting for the dog to get on the counter. This loud
device usually deters many dogs, coupled with a loud No! Then
give the dog a behavior that it can do; something that you can
praise. Perhaps a sit, then when the dog does that, mark and
reward.
- If the above does not get desired results try this: set
up the counter, go around the corner of the kitchen, have a
towel that is folded in half lengthwise, roll it into a tight
cylinder, and put rubber bands at the end of the towel. Launch
the towel toward the dog’s head when the front paws are on the
counter. After the towel strikes the dog in the face with enough
force to startle the dog, then you can give the dog a behavior
that it can easily do. Mark that behavior, and reward.
- A correction that the dog perceives as coming from the owner
is only going to reinforce to the dog that when he is counter
surfing, it is not safe when the owner is around. A correction
when the owner is not in the room works better, as it seems
to come from outer space.
If the above suggestions do not work for your
situation, then I suggest you totally manage the problem.
- The dog cannot get into the kitchen, because it is baby
gated out.
- The dog is never allowed into the kitchen, it is taught
a down stay whenever you are in the kitchen. This way the dog
does not get under your feet, while you are cooking, and a potential
hazard to the dog is avoided.
- A "place cue" can be taught, i.e. go to your rug,
and that is the ONLY place in the kitchen where the dog gets
any treats. This can work well if you are chopping veggies,
or meat, to keep dogs out from under foot. They lie in their
special place and a treat comes to them occasionally. They only
get the treat if they are on their "place".
- The dog is on a house line, so that you can easily pick
up the line and get the dog off the counter. Again if you do
this, you need to give the dog a behavior that it can perform
so you can mark that behavior and reward it.
If you feed kibble to your dog, try taking a
small handful of kibble, or treats and disperse them around the
house for the dog to forage and find. This may distract the dog
away from the counters. Also a treat ball that dispenses food as
it is rolled on the floor by the dog will give the dog an outlet
for his behavior to forage for food.
Basically we need to manage the dog, keep it
very busy, or give it a behavior it can do easily and we can reward
that good behavior.