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Teach the Retrieve with Clicker

by Vivian Bregman

Copyright January, 2005 -

 

Here is my method of teaching fetch to a puppy using a clicker.

When my newest Border Collie (BC)  was about two months old I rolled a tennis ball and she said, yea, a ball, so what.

I think that you should have it by now --- slowly slowly step by slow step. She finally picked it up and I jackpotted (gave a bunch of treats).And went to bed.

Next night I planned on starting from scratch but as soon as I rolled the ball she ran to it and picked it up and I c/t and she came for the treat. We played with getting her to bring it closer and closer for awhile that evening and she finally did.

The following night, going against everything that I knew, I rolled a dumbbell about three feet from me. She ran to it, picked it up by the bell and brought it back.

For the past ten months we've been working on bringing it back by the bar and sitting front.  And waiting for the command. She has never, so far, refused to bring it back, altho it's often to heel or to a crooked front, and, in fact, must be retrained from chasing everybody else's dumbell in Open class.

Last week she chased and brought back somebody else's --- big one, too.  I made no fuss - it was my fault for not holding her tightly enough.  And I'm not about to punish her for retrieving.

She now retrieves over a jump -- about 80% of the time going over both ways ---no, actually, she always goes over towards the dumbell, but not always back. But we haven't been doing it long.  She hasn't been shown at all yet, so I figure we have time.

BTW, I also use a metal and leather article and glove now and then. I can't show her in Canada so I'm not bothering with the wooden articles. Hope this explains it.

I might add that I'm NOT convinced that a dog can be trained using nothing but the clicker, but it does seem to clarify things for them --- my timing is pretty good after all these years --- but I don't think that I could have said "GOOD" fast enough to have done it.  The clicker is sharper in sound.

I couldn't believe that in three night she went from "So it's a ball, so what," to "Here's a toy, please throw it for me"! She's as much of a nuisance asking for toys to be thrown as any of my naturally compulsive retrievers.

This was written last year for the Clicker FAQ list.  (and is still there even as we speak)

As of this point she has her UKC CDX and is still crazy for the dumbell.


Vivian Bregman has put more than 30 obedience titles on her 8 dogs in AKC, UKC, CKC, ASCA and in Bermuda. She is a founding and Board member of IACP www.dogpro.org (International Association of Canine Professionals) and a member of NADOI www.nadoi.org (National Association of Dog Obedience Instructors).

Vivian started training and showing her own dogs in 1963 and teaching people how to train their dogs in 1965. In 1970, after teaching for two different dog clubs she started her own school, Kelev Canine College, in New Jersey.  Over the years since she has shown eight of her own dogs to over thirty obedience titles in the US, Canada, and Bermuda. She teaches classes thru the local adult school, as well as still giving private lessons.

Vivian is known as the "whatever works" trainer on the many email lists that she contributes to. She can be reached at: kelevcaninecollege@earthlink.net.



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