PROFILE: Bruce McClarin & Debbie Curtice
Bruce McClarin has been involved with the sport of dogs for over
forty years. His first dog was a coonhound that he trained to
hunt rabbits; later he bred and showed Shetland Sheepdogs. He
has competed and titled his dogs in obedience, agility, flyball
and herding events. Currently Bruce is breeding and training field-bred
English Cockers for field trials and hunt tests. An accomplished
sporting clays shooter, Bruce also enjoys hunting and shooting
over his spaniels.
Debbie Curtice has been training dogs for seventeen years. She
has been in obedience competitions in the U.S. and Canada, and
titled her American Cockers in both countries. Debbie has taught
obedience and agility in group classes as well as in private one-on-one
sessions. She has been trialing field bred English Cockers for
the past few years and, along with Bruce McClarin, co-owns Windsor
Beach Cockers.
Debbie enjoys shooting Sporting Clays and also has shot pheasants,
chukar, quail, grouse and woodcock over the cockers she has trained.
Puppy Training 101
Behaviorists say that the first sixteen to twenty weeks of a puppy’s
life is when it is the most receptive to learning. During this time frame
the pup also seems to retain knowledge better than at any other time in
his life.
While the most accepted training philosophy is based on letting a pup be
a ‘pup’ for the first six months of it’s life, we are
missing out on a valuable time frame. The important factor to keep in mind
during this formidable time is that the pup can do no wrong. There is no
negative, only positive. Pup will soon learn that by producing the right
behavior, it can generate a beneficial consequence or reward.
Over the last few years we have become strong advocates of clicker training.
There are trainers that laugh at clicker training, yet understand how the
electric collar works. Actually, both the clicker and the electric collar
work on similar principles.
The clicker is a positive reinforcer, the e-collar a negative reinforcer.
They both help shape behavior. Why use a clicker? Isn’t praise good
enough? The clicker has a distinct sound and is quick to use. It is also
neutral and unaffected by your emotions. It marks the behavior you are trying
to shape. Though praise is a great way to relate to your dog it doesn’t
always communicate information properly.
Two facts to keep in mind about training are the importance of timing and
consistency. Whether it is a reward or a correction, it must always be closely
related to the act.
First you need to condition the dog that the click means a reward will follow.
It’s click and treat. I use soft treats such as string cheese, hot
dog or pounce cat treats. The dog does not waste time chewing and you get
his attention back much quicker. Keep your treats small, maybe the size
of your fingernail or smaller. Now you just click and treat, do several
repetitions. If you don’t want to use a clicker, you can use a word
like ‘yes’ and then treat. Try to deliver the food right after
your click or
‘bridge’ word. Some trainers actually put the small pieces of
hot dog in their mouth. Bait bags also work well. You need to deliver the
reward as close to the click as possible.
Two very important facts about the clicker, the food always follows the
click, and the click ends the behavior.
The clicker is great working with puppies. It will ensure the use of positive
training, and keeps training fun for pup and trainer. We can’t say
that we use the clicker for all of our training, but we start pups out learning
this way and have had great success.
We also have used the clicker with older dogs to work through problems such
as retrieving. Shaping a retrieve with the clicker is definitely less stressful
on both the trainer and the dog than is force breaking.
If there is one command we feel is the cornerstone of spaniel training it
is the sit or hup command. It is the basis of steadying and directional
retrieving. With very young pups we do some play retrieving, teasing the
pup with a soft toy or bumper and throwing it for them to retrieve. Encourage
pup back to you, letting him hold the toy for a bit before taking it from
him.
As soon as we have the pup sitting, it will never make a retrieve unless
it is from a sitting position. Remember that this is the basis behind steadying.
At no time in the life of a finished spaniel will he make a retrieve unless
it is from the sitting position. So establish this picture early in pup’s
life and it will minimize future steadying problems.
Most readers probably have dogs that already are sitting. What you need
to work on is getting an instant response to verbal and whistle commands.
This is called fluency. What we are doing is conditioning the dog to a quick
response.
Level One - New Pup
Step 1) Condition pup to the clicker. Just click and treat several times.
Step 2) With a small piece of bait in your hand (try to hold the food between
your thumb and palm) lure the pup into a sitting position by bringing the
food back over his head so he will start to sit. Just before his butt hits
the floor, click and treat. Do not say anything, don’t tell the pup
hup or sit. That will be added after the dog is sitting quickly to the raised
hand over his head. If you have a problem with the dog backing up to follow
your hand movement instead of sitting, work the dog close to a wall. Later
you can just hold your hand up and pup will sit on its own. When the pup
is offering the sit behavior quickly with the raised hand as a cue, then
add the word ‘sit’ or ‘hup’. You only add the verbal
to the behavior once it is performed accurately. You want the verbal command
to be directly associated to the correct behavior. You don’t want
to keep saying ‘sit’ while the pup is still hopping around.
Keep the session short, maybe only three or four repetitions. Work short
sessions several times a day.
Remember, we are working for a quick response to the sit command. We are
not looking to increase the length of the sit at this point. When pup is
responding quickly to the hand signal and verbal command, start to incorporate
the whistle. One quick toot of the whistle is your hup command.
Remember that the click ends the behavior? When you are getting a nice quick
response to the sit command, start to lengthen the time pup sits before
the click and treat. At first it might only be to the count of two before
your click, but the dog will learn that the exercise does not end until
the click. Reinforce by repeating the hup command. Keep increasing the length
gradually before you click and release. The pup will learn that the click
is the release. You can also start to add a release word with the click
like ‘OK’. At this point you can start to phase out the click
and just use the release word before you treat. Do not stop the food reward.
We have had ten week old pups stay with their food dish at their feet and
not eat until released with a click and O.K. command.
Recall
Step 1)Stand with the bait again held in the palm of your hand, only this
time your palm is out and down at your side.
Call the pup to you with a ‘come’ or ‘here’ command.
Just as he reaches you, click and treat. You want your hand to become a
target to come in to. Later when you dog is retrieving it will help to bring
the bird to hand.
Again work on a quick response to the ‘come’ command. Make a
game of recall by calling pup back and forth between two people. Both players
need to treat the pup before the other calls him back. This is called a
recall relay. When you work alone, wait until pup is distracted and then
call him again to come to hand with a click and treat. Continue to feed
when he comes in. Later add the hup command after he comes, then treat and
release.
Now start adding the whistle, with the verbal commands. Again phase out
the clicker but not the food reward. You can vary the times you give the
treat. Make the pup come in a couple of times before you treat. Maybe start
to treat every other time. Randomize so that the pup is never sure when
the reward will come.
Level 2 - Older Pups
Use this method of yard work to increase fluency. Try to develop a quick
response to your hup and recall.
If you have started retrieving, make sure to hup the dog to the whistle,
then quickly release with a thrown bumper and the fetch command. The bumper
now becomes the reward. From this point on the dog will only retrieve from
the sit position. Don’t work on stays yet, only establish the retrieve
from the sit position. Always add the fetch command as you throw the bumper.
You want the release to be your idea. At this point we are just trying to
establish drive and enthusiasm.
Keep all training free of distractions. Train in your yard, living room
or basement. You want to have the pup’s full attention.
Next month we will work on retrieving and steadiness exercises. To learn
more about clicker training, we recommend Karen Pryor’s book ‘Don’t
Shoot the Dog’. This book and other training books can be ordered
through Dogwise.com or by phoning them at 1-800-776-2665. Clickers are sold
at Petco, Petsmart and other pet shops.
We would love to hear from you with any questions or comments. Feel free
to e-mail us at Windsorbeach
@ excite.com.

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