
I have a 5 month old Irish Terrier puppy, a handsome, joyful little lad, had him from 8 weeks. Also my 8 year old wire fox terrier girlie. I am the world's worst dog trainer - I just don't have much of a feel for it. Fox terrier and I managed to get GCDS Bronze, but she was very hard work and embarrassment at her behaviour eventually made me give up going to classes partway through silver. So I am not about to set the world of dog obedience alight!
I rather hoped to do better second time round and have been trying to use clicker training with puppy,and results are very mixed (my fault, not his). I didn't use clicker with my older girl.
On the plus side, I do have some very nice 'attention' heelwork coming along, something I never managed with my fox terrier. On the minus side, I can't get fast, enthusiastic sits, downs and stands - he does them as if I'm asking him to do them on hot coals - very reluctantly.
At training the other day my trainer suggested I must be over-training, as puppy backs aways, turns his head, yawns etc, when I'm trying to get basic positions (trainer gets them from him, but he also does a bit of the backing off etc for the trainer, though much worse with me). But I only train for five mins or so a couple of times a day. If I try for longer he does the yawning etc and wants to leave. I try to be happy and upbeat while training, don't get annoyed, I ignore mistakes and reward successes. Yet I seem to have done something to turn him off it.
I suppose I see other pups of similar age doing all the things I'm trying to achieve and don't see where I'm going wrong! I was so hoping to try Rally with this laddie, but beginning to think there is no hope if I can't get basic positions by five months old.
I probably just need to hear that I should indeed just slow up and enjoy his puppyhood. Or that I'm expecting too much too soon. Any ideas for trying to make things more fun for him would be good. I use homemade liver or sausage cake and he is very food motivated. Haven't managed to get him keen on toys as a training reward.
Claire