By Gary Wilkes
March 3, 2016
Here are a few “odds and ends” of training guidance that can be shared with your clients or used in your everyday life:
Cat house Heat
I get bombarded on Facebook with products that someone thought of I would like. I saw an ad for a small, heated cat-house. At first I dismissed it as I have two indoor Bengals and live in Arizona. heated anything isn’t a necessity. then I read the comments. A woman used one of these gizmos to attract a feral cat. then moved it inside and left the door open. The cat has gradually “warmed” to being inside the house with far less trouble than many people experience. The point is that in some cases very gentle reinforcers can have a dramatic effect on the behavior for fearful animals.
Saving the cushions for Guests
I have a client with a beautiful six-month-old purebred German Shepherd. He is progressing wonderfully, but last night he destroyed an outdoor cushion. It happens. However, I want to instruct him to leave cushions alone. I cut open the back of the cushion and inserted a small “indoor containment” transmitter. We left it lying on the floor. When he methods he will get a pulsing shock that is far less than what you get when you shuffle across the carpet and touch something metallic. It’s just enough to instruct him to leave cushions alone. The same item can keep dogs out of the trash can, off beds, and away from the front door when guests come to the house. If you are interested, this is the kind of product that can also be a lucrative addition to your bottom line.
Counter Surfing
This can be the bane of many canine owners existence. The same for cats that leave their litter-dusted paws on counter tops. here are two solutions:
Dogs: get a battery operated “passive infrared motion detector” and put it on the counter top. When the canine sticks its nose above the counter, a horrific alarm goes off. This is the equivalent of the word “NO” to identify which behavior caused the punishment to follow.
Cats: When you get a new cat, go to a home improvement store and purchase some sheets of clear plastic used for fluorescent-tube ceiling lights. get enough to cover the length of the counter-top. Duck-tape the plastic at a 45 degree angle from the edge of the counter to the back wall. If the cat jumps up, it will rapidly slide off to the ground. If you are concerned about injury from sliding off, get some short-term carpet to cover the landing zone. live with this arrangement for a couple weeks and you will instruct the cat that counter tops are the equivalent of mountain tops.
The Front Door
Want a canine to learn to never rush the front door? If the canine also hates having its nails trimmed, you’re in luck. ring your door bell and wait for the chaos as the canine comes flying forward. Trim one nail. Repeat. Within three or four repetitions, the sound of the bell will create a very front-door savvy dog. You can do that same thing with any other experience the canine doesn’t like such as taking a pill or taking a bath. If the owner already has a struggle over easy dealing with issues, it makes sense to make use of them. If you wish to remove the anxiety over those problems, you can do it after you put them to work for you.
Back Seat Driver
Here’s one that affects a lot of people – dogs that won’t stay in the back seat of the car. go to an office supply store and get one of those plastic mats that safeguard carpet from wheeled office chairs. The underside has plastic cones to avoid the mat from sliding around. cut a piece to fit the front seat and turn it upside down. Yes, it’s not going to feel good. No, it’s not going to hurt the dog. If you want, you can instruct “get in the back seat” by simply saying that as the canine lands on the mat. then give the canine a treat. After two or three rides, view the behavior decline. If you add periodic treats for passive back-seat driving, you’ll have a pretty good solution.
Hair brushing for sensitive Dogs
If you have a double coated canine that hates being brushed and/or vacuum sweepers, get an extra-long hose for a shop-vac and put it in an adjacent room with the door partially closed. all of a sudden the sound of the vacuum is drastically decreased and the canine will allow you to brush them. The vacuum makes getting rid of the hair workable as you strip out hunks of dead hair. Lavishly use treats during the brushing so you break the process down into short duration repetitions at first. When you are done, use plastic box-sealing tape or duck-tape to remove the rest of the hair.
We all have tricks or suggestions that can help clients deal with the various behavioral issues that go along with pet ownership. The much more typically you are the author of safe and effective solutions, the much more you will be seen as a reputable source for canine and cat advice! ✂
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