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>I'm sorry but he is at least in part responsible for the general public trying his methods out,
> People often say to me that I'm lucky that I've got dogs that want to please me and want to be with me, which is an absolute load of rubbish, there was no luck involved but lots of hard work. They don't want to please me, they want to please themselves and I make sure working for me is rewarding to them.
>There is assertive and there is bullying.
> To me he is both and I don't think you need to be either of those things to have a happy well trained dog
> Like jan Fennell he is great at marketing himself; also his methods appeal more to some sections of the dog owning community than others.
> Ohh I got that wrong!!!! according to his website Daddy was Cesars from 4 months old, different to what his book says ?????
> suspect the reason canines have managed to inveigle themselves into our lives is that they too need and form hierarchical social structures.
> I am not defending CM's domineering and aggressive manner, but I do believe that a person has to be assertive when dealing with dogs and people, otherwise they will be walked all over.
> now domestic dogs live in a totally different world, they are not allowed to breed at will, are often in groups of their piers, very close to their own age & not related, or even living on their own. Wolf behaviour due to domestication is worlds apart from the average domestic pet.
>I think Cesar is great
> CM has worked with a lot of strong breeds, I have never met a pitbull.. so maybe my coochy coochy (golden retriever style) approach wouldn't work with them
> I think like all dog trainers etc.. you take some methods and leave others.
> The 'coochy coochy' approach works wonders with my Mastiff :-) There is no way he would respond well to being 'dominated' and bullied like CM does to the smaller/less powerfull breeds.
>
> I've seen CM on TV work with an African Mastiff, he did none of his dominating behaviours and def. no alpha rolls, he used socialisation and postitive association (food rewards) to work with him. If he can do that with the massive, powerfull, stubborn breeds (my Mastiff has showed me a whole new meaning to the word stubborn <IMG alt=eek src="/images/eek.gif"> ) then he can use that approach with the smaller dogs, but he doesn't <IMG class=sml alt=:-( src="/images/default/sml_neg.png">
> No 'dont try this at home' warning on HER shows!
I know of at least two: Wendy Hagger with Ob Ch Aramisty Double O'Seven and Suzanna Jaffa's Ob. Ch Cagasa Dark 'n' Delicious OW CDex UDex WDex. There are others currently working ticket that are clicker trained. With clicker training only arriving in the UK 15 years ago, and obedience champions not being made up at the drop of a hat, time will tell. Those long established aren't about to change their training methods either I wouldn't have thought -but none of this means there never will be more ob ch clicker trained dogs in the UK or that the method is limited
> my dogs are much happier, and no longer stressy dogs around the house
(well, saying that, I don't class the odd burst of excitement due to immaturity as bad beahviour, I expect CM fans would though)
and amazingly it's through reward based training, not any CM thing. > I have stopped treating my dogs like fluffy pets and started treating them like dogs
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