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August 13, 2009 at 10:04 pm #63814puppybluesMember
Is there such things as formal hand signals for training? I have found Scooby has trouble switching from my voice to my sons voice. Yet will do things for my son when he puts his hand in different positions.
His down seems to be cued to my hand in a fist holding a treat on the floor. Rather than me saying down.
So as I want us all to help out in the training maybe this would be easier. (as I fall about laughing at my son copying my girly tone)August 13, 2009 at 11:46 pm #78711xtineMemberBev will be able to give you better advice than me on this but we have verbal and visual cues..eg down is “down” and index finger pointing to the floor, sit is index finger pointing up, “come” is a full hand of fingers (?) with the back of hand facing dog…. hope that helps a little?
August 13, 2009 at 11:51 pm #78712puppybluesMemberThank you xtine ;D
August 14, 2009 at 8:24 am #78713kerrie and stanMemberi dont think there are any ‘offical’ hand signals but mine are:
Down – point to the floor with index finger
Flat (were they are laid flat on thier side) – down signal then tap the floor with index finger
Sit – point up with back of hand facing dog
come – arms wide (like your an airoplane)
Stay – flat palm facing dog, policeman style
Wait – point at were dog is
Away – sweep arm accross body and point were dog should goi think thats is 😀
August 14, 2009 at 11:05 am #78714SweetypyeMemberDogs will always take their cue from body language first; one of the “tests” to see if a dog understands verbal cues is to give them out of sight!
In order to facilitate dogs putting their ears on, once the dog has learned the body language cue, precede it by the verbal one, wait a second and follow up with body language. NEVER say and do a cue simultaneously.
this way you can transfer behaviours between cues, the same applies with a whistle.
For example, if you were working a dog on film you would use body signals out of camera shot so your voice was not caught on the soundtrack; in the home you would use a verbal cue and in a field 300 yards a way you would use a whistle.
Same behaviour but on three different cues appropriate to the environment.
August 14, 2009 at 2:05 pm #78715puppybluesMemberThank you guys. Sounds like you all dothe same signs, and sweetypye it makes sense now. I was double cuing him speech and body language. Now I will remember to wait a second in between. Does he hear the word or the tone in your voice?.
August 14, 2009 at 2:08 pm #78716kerrie and stanMemberpeople believe that dogs hear the sound not the word that is produced but i like to believe that my boy can understand me ;D
August 14, 2009 at 2:25 pm #78717SweetypyeMemberAgain you can test your dog as to tone or word.
I often teach my clients in Arabic to give them an understanding of what a dog does not understand! :educated:
August 14, 2009 at 2:35 pm #78718xtineMember😀 good one Sweetypye ;D
We thought we were being smart by discussing the squirrel that frequented our garden in french… Fritz now knows the French word and not the English :surrender: 😀
August 14, 2009 at 3:04 pm #78719puppybluesMemberWow multilingual dogs ;D
August 14, 2009 at 3:42 pm #78720kizkiznobiteMemberhave emailed you my cue sheet
August 14, 2009 at 3:58 pm #78721puppybluesMemberThank you
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