I well remember the first "lesson" I had with a dog-trainer. It was a 6 week course and we would meet for one hour each week and she would do some coaching and assign "homework" for the following week. The first week, I was to reserve 1/2 each day to practice the "down/stay" command. During that time, I would put both my dogs in a down/stay, watch them carefully and give corrections immediately if they moved. I knew that the "down" part would be easy as my dogs already knew that command. As for the "stay", I thought that this would be next-to-impossible as one of my dogs was exceptionally hyper. At the beginning of the week there we plenty of corrections but as the week went on, I noticed fewer and fewer. By the end of the week, it was like magic. Both dogs "stayed" until they were given the "free" command. These dogs were so well-trained that I could put them in a down/stay at a dog park and they wouldn't move. I would take them to the pet store, put them in a down/stay while doing my transactions with the cashier, and they wouldn't budge, even with other dogs and traffic around them. I learned so much from that dog-trainer, but the most important thing was what was possible in dog-training if you're willing to invest a little time and effort into training your dogs. Love your videos.
The only thing she needs to do, which is something that a lot of people do, is change the tone of her voice. High pitched, excited tones make a dog excited and then act out. She just needs to change the tone of her voice to one of calm self confidence and she'll do better.
It's good to have the specific behavior to watch, but also, a lot of trained behaviors can be applied to how to train other behaviors if you understand they why behind the training.
Amazing explanation about why you would not call him to you as a release. I don't think I have never heard anyone explain the way you did and made a lot of sense.
10:21 that is a tremendous improvement! This right here is really an excellent example of literally teaching a dog to understand exactly what's required of him. In my experience, dogs like goldens and labs really love to please their owners and others. They're usually all around great dogs that just want everyone to be happy lol That look on that boy's face is priceless
The Joy of Jet: Part 3… This is great! Thank you, Joel, for covering the nuance of this, esp. the squat, hand position, foot position in release, and not being “too excited” when greeting a visitor. Bravo! p.s.”O-k-a-y”: the long form of “o-k.” 😉
I trained my pup to remain in her crate until she heard break, she slept in a crate for 1.5 years….was a extra large crate….now she’s out of the crate and sleeping in a dog bed…but after nap time and in the morning she whines to wake me, morning, and still waits for her break command, conditioning. I use a treat after exercise time, and after all the training, otherwise she’s too focused on the food. She’s a Border Point, GSP and Border Collie…she absolutely loves thinking games and training, she goes into a thinking game so i’ll play…I’ve taught to creep up on her ball…she has to hold over it, using her inate skill of pointing to prey or what she’s bred to herd….she loves this game, I have to say closer, closer, and I have taught her to take one step at a time. I agree the lady used too high pitched of tone, again, it triggers something that’s difficult for them to ignore. My dog loves when she can barely hear it, she stares at me listening.
Queens guard level here in UK, the horses at Buckingham Palace sometimes bite, and if they don’t want to stand still for an hour….. they won’t !!, they have to fetch another horse out lol !! Great vid !!
You probably already know all about it, but just incase, when the horse does something like bite or kick to try and make you move away or stop something they should be okay with, give them more pressure, and release pressure when they don't give an unpleasant response.
I guess it’s now kings guards, but there’s a sinister side to me that actually quite enjoys watching the kings guards horses rag peoples clothes, when they try to hold the reins lol !! 😂😂
So good. Thanks. These Jet videos are so good. We'd all love another Jet video if you could. Oh and another interesting thing about Goldens, as a dog trainer, they are one of the only dogs that if I'm seeing a client with one, I usually won't bring treats. Goldens just get such joy when petted, especially on the top of the head and also the side of the head. Thanks again.
With so many dog trainers on CZcams I’m so glad I found your channel. One of your videos that says “never let your dog blow you off” is so true. Before watching your videos my 4 year old dog would often not to listen to a command, even though she knows what I’m asking. I would kind of just let it go and not do anything. After your videos I started putting her back in stays that she broke or put her in downs that she refused. The first few times I had to do it over and over again. Once it clicked in her head, she wasn’t breaking that stay or down. After one day of me showing her it’s not a game and I’m the boss she listens so much better. Occasionally she still slips up but I just do the same thing and she catches on very quick. Keep up the good content!
Love spatial pressure! Underused and under talked about. Dogs understand it! Much better than verbal it’s how dogs communicate. Great for setting boundaries in the house for a puppy and then you don’t need physical barriers. Good topic for a podcast.
Beautiful detailed explanations/demo of the nuances of training this bed/stay. I'm finally walking my 11-yr-old, 84-pound street-rescue Rednose Pitbull without the Gentle Leader now--all thanks to you, Joel Beckman!!!! Thank you sooooooo much🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🐾❤️🐾❤️🐾❤️
Understanding how pressure throughout a physical space works is key to a lot of dog training and it really klicks when you realize it works similarly with other social animals. My example is cattle; working with cattle daily you understand quickly that you won’t ever move a 1,400 lbs cow by force, but by being observant on their body language, where their head is pointing and what they’re looking at you can get them to where you want just by being in the right place at the right time; same thing whether you’re on foot, horseback or an ATV. Dogs, while having a different body language and not being herd animals the same way are also very sensitive to this sort of pressure. It also seems to me that their innate understanding of this is what allows them to be so effective at herding other animals. A good herding dog just knows where to go in relation to the leader and the herded animals for them to move where the leader wants them, you don’t need to tell it.
Great method. I trained mine similarly. Just a small nitpick. It's not learned helplessness. Learned helplessness happens when you have a continuous negative stimulus (like pressure or electroshocks) and whatever behavior the dog shows, it won't stop. This will result in the dog to stop trying. It's also quite hard to instill learned helplessness in a dog. In this training method, the negative stimulus (the blocking and pressuring him back) only happens after he leaves the bed and he can prevent it by staying on the bed. It's simply a behavior modification through positive punishment + negative reinforcement achieved through body language.
Joel i love your videos. I started watching you when i got my golden when she was 3 months old. Maggie is now 15 months old and doing so well. She does stay pretty well. I see i need to put her on her bed to stay. I agree with the comment of no mask...so sad to see people believing the lie that they work. We follow your training for heel and recall. Training is on going all the time. I bought her for a companion as I'm alone alot. Goldens are the best. She never leaves my side. 12:5212:5212:52
Anytime we get a little cocky the universe has a way of correcting us.... "I'm watching him the whole time, I will never take my eyes off him [06:10]" :)
A great (and easy) assist in teaching a bed-stay is to use a loose tether line. The dog can make the mistake, but can’t leave the area. Try using a tether as you’re proofing the bed-stay command. (Joel knows I respect all the commonsense training he shows.)
Beckman is an incredibly and diverse trainer. Just look at how he is training the blond to sit and eat out of a horse feed bag … Bravo 👏 Beckman, bravo 👏.
Hey i see a new thing what i never have see before, "the kindergarden move" i see that it's working bud i don't get the term, of course i gonna try immediately, thank you so much ❤️🙏🏾😇
Hello. I love your videos. I have a quick question: From what age is it recommended to show him how to stay there? My German Shepherd is now 3 months old.
Start the process around 3m. Use lots of treats, do it when they’re tired and do small approximations with distance, distraction and duration. Don’t “bite off more than you (of the dog) can chew”.
Some people still need to wear masks, like me, because of autoimmune diseases, sometimes it’s cancer treatment, get off your judgement…worry about yourself
I have a 5 month old Shikoku he’s is super smart and very trainable, bread to be an independent hunting dog, a hound. I basically just train by positive reinforcement(treats) and he will stay for short periods(ten seconds) on his mat while I walk away, is it too early to expect him to stay for long periods ?
I don't really agree with this- I walk up to the dog and release/break so they don't sit in anticipation ready to fly off there. I want them to settle in their bed/place stay-since it could be 5 mins or a few hours they may be there. I dont want to create that kind of arousal upon releasing, especially if its to prevent bombarding guests etc. Thats my opinion though. Everyone has one.
I walk my dog off lead and I always make him wait at a road crossing whether he's in front or behind. When he's in front I'll make him wait until I catch up and give the all clear. I do it more often though when he's behind. I wait for him to catch up then tell him to stay while I cross the road and keep walking making him think I'm leaving him there. That way when I indicate he can cross he already wants to catch up which I hope makes him realise he needs to be closer when I get to crossings in the first place. He's pretty smart though and knows what I'm doing so likes to wind me up by lagging behind on purpose again.
I don’t think ‘off lead’ walking is a good idea in a village/town environment, if my Golden saw a squirrel, cat or another dog he’d forget me and chase the ‘offender’.
@@leminako I train them off lead as pups and do middle of the night walks so even if they make a mistake I'm not in a panic when I correct it. If you are in control around the house then you can control them anywhere.
@@prndownload at The beginning as pup I occasionly let him walk lose by my side. Never left me. But now at 8 months he goes after every dog he sees even from away distance. Also a line of school kids catches his attention. Wouldn't dare letting him of leash. I'd love to but wouldn't dare
@@neilurquhart8622 Because mine are off lead young they learn good self control with some guidance. It allows them to be more relaxed so when they meet people, kids, dogs, cats or any other animal they still know the rules and aren't overwhelmed by excitement.
How are you Mr. Beckman . I just want to hear your opinion on Tom Davis dog training . If you don’t know who he is . He is also a dog trainer who does CZcams . He doesn’t have a partner in crime like you do , The DOGFATHER himself PRINCE ! I’m a novice when it comes to Dogs so I wanna know what to do and what not to . Thanks 🙏🏼
I'm having trouble with my chow chow I've had him since he was 2 weeks old bottle fed him he's 4 months now he's leash and crate trained well socialized and plays well with everybody and other dogs even knows a couple of tricks the only thing I'm struggling with is potty training he will only go on pads by the door and if I stop him before he goes to take him outside he will hold it I can stay outside for two hours will not go once he didn't go for 19 hours because I removed the pads entirely I even tried putting the pads outside doesn't work don't know what else to do
For starters get rid of the pads. Take him out for a potty walk, and if he does not go potty take him back inside, put him back into his crate and wait 30 minutes. Repeat until he goes potty. Absolutely zero inside freedom until he goes potty outside. Once he has finally gone potty outside have a “potty party” (omg you’re the mostest bestest boy EVAR!!!!! I WUV YOU SO MUUUUCH!!!) Also only limited freedom on a leash until entirely potty trained which should only take a few days. You may want to do it on a weekend when you have the time to devote to it. My deaf 5 month old pit bull came to us absolutely un potty trained (with zero manners or training of any kind) and we had her asking to go outside to potty within 4 days.
@@dana7340 I only work 4 days a week so I get plenty of time with him the only time he's out of his crate is to eat/play/train/walk in that order then chills infront of the tv for about 20min then back into the crate then repeat every 3 hours learned that on his channel. He only holds it if I'm home and try to take him outside to but when I'm working he will go whenever he wants so I have to leave something for him in his pen to relieve himself on if I don't he will poop and pee all over his pen. I keep him in dog play pen while at work because 8 hours is to long to he trapped in a crate with no way to potty or move around
@@jerimiah_y Me, too. But if you rewatch the clip, the reason Joel did that becomes clear. Jet didn’t recognize “o-k” with the “a-y” tacked on. He responded to the “o-k” from his owner. : )
I don't get exactly what you mean, but a calm dog won't be holding it's tail, the tail will just flop and relax. Could you please show me the exact spot in the video where you think the dog is stressed because I can't find it?@@watchmoivies123
I would recommend not wearing masks under the circumstances. Masks impede visual and audible communication between the wearer and others, especially in schooling situations.
Also cloth masks actually spread disease more than no mask, because saliva etc gets caught in the mask and is then aerosolized when breathing, spreading the germs much more efficiently than with no mask. Also it doesn't prevent the wearer from inhaling the air unless if it seals properly against the face. But yeah. Don't wear a skimask for social interactions is a pretty solid piece of advice without getting into the germ scare part of it
There's the fear factor. It saddens me to see, but at this point people that do that really have succumbed to the fear and just don't want to think that they've been lied to, while the perpetrators laugh all the way to the bank and maintain their growing seats of power
Covid is still a thing guys. 🙄 Let people make their own decisions. I Would recommend wearing masks if you aren’t 100% well or getting over an illness (if you are unable to stay home for whatever reason). Can never understand this weird stigma against masks. Shameful really , and lastly? Yes, we need younger people who know a thing or two (and aren’t criminals fyi) to run a governing body. With all that said, I said my piece. Good day.
@@Dognerdca by watching the video it became my business, and I'm perfectly entitled to comment. I'm not being offensive just asking why someone is doing something that to me seems quite strange. So wind your neck in.
@@BDTraining The training industry is already a shit show!! You FK, DD if there is a trainer that someone could learn from would be Cesar. Haha what are you going to show people your hand shack method!? Have people trying that idiotic idea and someone get bit.
Hi Joel! This is Craig and Julian from Northern California....where can I find out more info on The Beckman Coaching Program that you've mentioned in this video? I'm very interested in what it offers. Thank you so much.
I well remember the first "lesson" I had with a dog-trainer. It was a 6 week course and we would meet for one hour each week and she would do some coaching and assign "homework" for the following week.
The first week, I was to reserve 1/2 each day to practice the "down/stay" command. During that time, I would put both my dogs in a down/stay, watch them carefully and give corrections immediately if they moved. I knew that the "down" part would be easy as my dogs already knew that command. As for the "stay", I thought that this would be next-to-impossible as one of my dogs was exceptionally hyper.
At the beginning of the week there we plenty of corrections but as the week went on, I noticed fewer and fewer. By the end of the week, it was like magic. Both dogs "stayed" until they were given the "free" command.
These dogs were so well-trained that I could put them in a down/stay at a dog park and they wouldn't move. I would take them to the pet store, put them in a down/stay while doing my transactions with the cashier, and they wouldn't budge, even with other dogs and traffic around them.
I learned so much from that dog-trainer, but the most important thing was what was possible in dog-training if you're willing to invest a little time and effort into training your dogs.
Love your videos.
The only thing she needs to do, which is something that a lot of people do, is change the tone of her voice. High pitched, excited tones make a dog excited and then act out. She just needs to change the tone of her voice to one of calm self confidence and she'll do better.
I agree. Tone is a big part of the dog realizing this isn't a game. Especially with goldens lol
Consistence is key! 🐶
And patience and follow-through. Most people just don't want to do the work.
That's crazy he uploaded this because stay is the next thing I want to learn how to teach dogs.
It's good to have the specific behavior to watch, but also, a lot of trained behaviors can be applied to how to train other behaviors if you understand they why behind the training.
Amazing explanation about why you would not call him to you as a release. I don't think I have never heard anyone explain the way you did and made a lot of sense.
I love to see dogs listen/ respect their leaders.😂❤
10:21 that is a tremendous improvement! This right here is really an excellent example of literally teaching a dog to understand exactly what's required of him. In my experience, dogs like goldens and labs really love to please their owners and others. They're usually all around great dogs that just want everyone to be happy lol
That look on that boy's face is priceless
"lyst"! Couldn't find "your other ackount"
@@rptrick79 creative name, I know 😂
The excitement Jett had when getting released..he definitely knew he wasn't supposed to leave the bed by the end.
It's funny that even though his owner released him, he was more focused on Joel on that last release. Guy knows who is boss. 😂
The Joy of Jet: Part 3… This is great! Thank you, Joel, for covering the nuance of this, esp. the squat, hand position, foot position in release, and not being “too excited” when greeting a visitor. Bravo! p.s.”O-k-a-y”: the long form of “o-k.” 😉
I love this lady “let’s try one more time” i was thinking the same thing 😅😅
Best doggy content i ‘ve found on yt in my opinion
Luckily I ‘m able to understand English
Thanks for all
Greetings from france
Really? I’m sad for you.
I trained my pup to remain in her crate until she heard break, she slept in a crate for 1.5 years….was a extra large crate….now she’s out of the crate and sleeping in a dog bed…but after nap time and in the morning she whines to wake me, morning, and still waits for her break command, conditioning.
I use a treat after exercise time, and after all the training, otherwise she’s too focused on the food. She’s a Border Point, GSP and Border Collie…she absolutely loves thinking games and training, she goes into a thinking game so i’ll play…I’ve taught to creep up on her ball…she has to hold over it, using her inate skill of pointing to prey or what she’s bred to herd….she loves this game, I have to say closer, closer, and I have taught her to take one step at a time.
I agree the lady used too high pitched of tone, again, it triggers something that’s difficult for them to ignore. My dog loves when she can barely hear it, she stares at me listening.
Queens guard level here in UK, the horses at Buckingham Palace sometimes bite, and if they don’t want to stand still for an hour….. they won’t !!, they have to fetch another horse out lol !!
Great vid !!
You probably already know all about it, but just incase, when the horse does something like bite or kick to try and make you move away or stop something they should be okay with, give them more pressure, and release pressure when they don't give an unpleasant response.
I guess it’s now kings guards, but there’s a sinister side to me that actually quite enjoys watching the kings guards horses rag peoples clothes, when they try to hold the reins lol !! 😂😂
I really appreciate your videos with realistically uncooperative (at least at first) dogs. It's much more useful than showing ideal situations.
So good. Thanks. These Jet videos are so good. We'd all love another Jet video if you could.
Oh and another interesting thing about Goldens, as a dog trainer, they are one of the only dogs that if I'm seeing a client with one, I usually won't bring treats. Goldens just get such joy when petted, especially on the top of the head and also the side of the head.
Thanks again.
With so many dog trainers on CZcams I’m so glad I found your channel. One of your videos that says “never let your dog blow you off” is so true.
Before watching your videos my 4 year old dog would often not to listen to a command, even though she knows what I’m asking. I would kind of just let it go and not do anything. After your videos I started putting her back in stays that she broke or put her in downs that she refused. The first few times I had to do it over and over again. Once it clicked in her head, she wasn’t breaking that stay or down.
After one day of me showing her it’s not a game and I’m the boss she listens so much better. Occasionally she still slips up but I just do the same thing and she catches on very quick.
Keep up the good content!
Love spatial pressure! Underused and under talked about. Dogs understand it! Much better than verbal it’s how dogs communicate. Great for setting boundaries in the house for a puppy and then you don’t need physical barriers. Good topic for a podcast.
Beautiful detailed explanations/demo of the nuances of training this bed/stay. I'm finally walking my 11-yr-old, 84-pound street-rescue Rednose Pitbull without the Gentle Leader now--all thanks to you, Joel Beckman!!!! Thank you sooooooo much🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🐾❤️🐾❤️🐾❤️
Wow. Nice job by the owner. Her voice gets him excited!! I love the doggie. ❤
Love Jet’s videos ❤
You are the true man !
love this this is so helpful
Understanding how pressure throughout a physical space works is key to a lot of dog training and it really klicks when you realize it works similarly with other social animals. My example is cattle; working with cattle daily you understand quickly that you won’t ever move a 1,400 lbs cow by force, but by being observant on their body language, where their head is pointing and what they’re looking at you can get them to where you want just by being in the right place at the right time; same thing whether you’re on foot, horseback or an ATV. Dogs, while having a different body language and not being herd animals the same way are also very sensitive to this sort of pressure. It also seems to me that their innate understanding of this is what allows them to be so effective at herding other animals. A good herding dog just knows where to go in relation to the leader and the herded animals for them to move where the leader wants them, you don’t need to tell it.
Great method. I trained mine similarly.
Just a small nitpick. It's not learned helplessness. Learned helplessness happens when you have a continuous negative stimulus (like pressure or electroshocks) and whatever behavior the dog shows, it won't stop. This will result in the dog to stop trying. It's also quite hard to instill learned helplessness in a dog.
In this training method, the negative stimulus (the blocking and pressuring him back) only happens after he leaves the bed and he can prevent it by staying on the bed. It's simply a behavior modification through positive punishment + negative reinforcement achieved through body language.
Joel i love your videos. I started watching you when i got my golden when she was 3 months old. Maggie is now 15 months old and doing so well. She does stay pretty well. I see i need to put her on her bed to stay. I agree with the comment of no mask...so sad to see people believing the lie that they work. We follow your training for heel and recall. Training is on going all the time. I bought her for a companion as I'm alone alot. Goldens are the best. She never leaves my side. 12:52 12:52 12:52
Too far Pat. Too far 😏
Well-done, Joel, and well-explained. I wish my family was as on-board for consistency with dogs. Maybe by the time we get the next one... ;)
Why would get a “next” one if you can’t even handle the first one? This is the problem with dog owners lol
Anytime we get a little cocky the universe has a way of correcting us.... "I'm watching him the whole time, I will never take my eyes off him [06:10]" :)
A great (and easy) assist in teaching a bed-stay is to use a loose tether line. The dog can make the mistake, but can’t leave the area.
Try using a tether as you’re proofing the bed-stay command.
(Joel knows I respect all the commonsense training he shows.)
Owner sounds like Darth Vader... 😂😂😂
thats a good boy
😂💥😃 Get comfortable, bro 💥😆💥🤣
This dog is funny haha
🙏🏻
Beckman is an incredibly and diverse trainer. Just look at how he is training the blond to sit and eat out of a horse feed bag … Bravo 👏 Beckman, bravo 👏.
Man I love Goldens haha
Hey i see a new thing what i never have see before, "the kindergarden move" i see that it's working bud i don't get the term, of course i gonna try immediately, thank you so much ❤️🙏🏾😇
D'awwwww
Hello. I love your videos. I have a quick question: From what age is it recommended to show him how to stay there? My German Shepherd is now 3 months old.
Start the process around 3m. Use lots of treats, do it when they’re tired and do small approximations with distance, distraction and duration. Don’t “bite off more than you (of the dog) can chew”.
@@BDTraining Thank you so much. I'll let you know about it a little later.
Great video. Joel: my dog’s day bed has a coffee table blocking my dog’s view of me. Is that a concern? She can hear me just fine
Good video, you showed almost not edited the all way long
good video. I'm going to stay in denial and assume this video is from 4 years ago and people aren't still running around with masks 4 years later.
I didn't see any running in this video.
Some people still need to wear masks, like me, because of autoimmune diseases, sometimes it’s cancer treatment, get off your judgement…worry about yourself
Hey are you guys going to go to the 60th year alumni reunion for SW?
I have a 5 month old Shikoku he’s is super smart and very trainable, bread to be an independent hunting dog, a hound. I basically just train by positive reinforcement(treats) and he will stay for short periods(ten seconds) on his mat while I walk away, is it too early to expect him to stay for long periods ?
I want them to test me because I like making them return until they get it right.
Can you please make a video on what to do if your dog bites another dog?
I don't really agree with this- I walk up to the dog and release/break so they don't sit in anticipation ready to fly off there. I want them to settle in their bed/place stay-since it could be 5 mins or a few hours they may be there. I dont want to create that kind of arousal upon releasing, especially if its to prevent bombarding guests etc.
Thats my opinion though. Everyone has one.
Wondering jet 17
Hey doggie peeps!
Heeeyy!😀
@@alaskanaussiefurguson Howdy! 👋
What’s the criteria for when the dog goes to bed, falls asleep and then wakes up?
Is the dog expected to remember they’re on bed stay?
Brave designer 80
I walk my dog off lead and I always make him wait at a road crossing whether he's in front or behind. When he's in front I'll make him wait until I catch up and give the all clear. I do it more often though when he's behind. I wait for him to catch up then tell him to stay while I cross the road and keep walking making him think I'm leaving him there. That way when I indicate he can cross he already wants to catch up which I hope makes him realise he needs to be closer when I get to crossings in the first place. He's pretty smart though and knows what I'm doing so likes to wind me up by lagging behind on purpose again.
How do you get off lead walking? I would be in constant "fear" that he would cross the road going to another dog or something similar.
I don’t think ‘off lead’ walking is a good idea in a village/town environment, if my Golden saw a squirrel, cat or another dog he’d forget me and chase the ‘offender’.
@@leminako I train them off lead as pups and do middle of the night walks so even if they make a mistake I'm not in a panic when I correct it. If you are in control around the house then you can control them anywhere.
@@prndownload at The beginning as pup I occasionly let him walk lose by my side. Never left me. But now at 8 months he goes after every dog he sees even from away distance. Also a line of school kids catches his attention. Wouldn't dare letting him of leash. I'd love to but wouldn't dare
@@neilurquhart8622 Because mine are off lead young they learn good self control with some guidance. It allows them to be more relaxed so when they meet people, kids, dogs, cats or any other animal they still know the rules and aren't overwhelmed by excitement.
How are you Mr. Beckman . I just want to hear your opinion on Tom Davis dog training . If you don’t know who he is . He is also a dog trainer who does CZcams . He doesn’t have a partner in crime like you do , The DOGFATHER himself PRINCE ! I’m a novice when it comes to Dogs so I wanna know what to do and what not to . Thanks 🙏🏼
Dry beast 39
I did just stay so different, so so different but everybody does it different don’t they?
I'm having trouble with my chow chow I've had him since he was 2 weeks old bottle fed him he's 4 months now he's leash and crate trained well socialized and plays well with everybody and other dogs even knows a couple of tricks the only thing I'm struggling with is potty training he will only go on pads by the door and if I stop him before he goes to take him outside he will hold it I can stay outside for two hours will not go once he didn't go for 19 hours because I removed the pads entirely I even tried putting the pads outside doesn't work don't know what else to do
For starters get rid of the pads.
Take him out for a potty walk, and if he does not go potty take him back inside, put him back into his crate and wait 30 minutes. Repeat until he goes potty.
Absolutely zero inside freedom until he goes potty outside.
Once he has finally gone potty outside have a “potty party” (omg you’re the mostest bestest boy EVAR!!!!!
I WUV YOU SO MUUUUCH!!!)
Also only limited freedom on a leash until entirely potty trained which should only take a few days.
You may want to do it on a weekend when you have the time to devote to it.
My deaf 5 month old pit bull came to us absolutely un potty trained (with zero manners or training of any kind) and we had her asking to go outside to potty within 4 days.
@@dana7340 I only work 4 days a week so I get plenty of time with him the only time he's out of his crate is to eat/play/train/walk in that order then chills infront of the tv for about 20min then back into the crate then repeat every 3 hours learned that on his channel. He only holds it if I'm home and try to take him outside to but when I'm working he will go whenever he wants so I have to leave something for him in his pen to relieve himself on if I don't he will poop and pee all over his pen. I keep him in dog play pen while at work because 8 hours is to long to he trapped in a crate with no way to potty or move around
@@dana7340 his pad is by the door because his pen is by the door because that the only place I don't have carpet in my loft
Cold designer 74
Have you ever worked with service dogs in training? The standards of behavior are higher but your methods seem to work well most of the time.
Why is that woman wearing a muzzle 😂😂
Does he no stay? Are you teaching it on the bed?
He's learning it.
Hard teacher 30
Spelling OKAY is the same as OK+A-Y. 😅 hehe
I noticed this, too. But clearly Jet can’t spell; the “A-Y” threw him off! Clever, Joel! 9:50
@@zuzuspetals8323 yep. Just thought it was kinda funny. The dog likely didn’t pickup on it anyway.
@@jerimiah_y Me, too. But if you rewatch the clip, the reason Joel did that becomes clear. Jet didn’t recognize “o-k” with the “a-y” tacked on. He responded to the “o-k” from his owner. : )
@@zuzuspetals8323 oh I know. I didn’t miss that. 😄
What year is this filmed? Owner needs to take mask off.
Damn she's Mickey Mouse😂
That low tail like a rattlesnake is a stressful tail
Actually a relaxed, calm tail. It only means stress or fear when the tail is actually between the legs.
@@aussieoutbackfarm no that’s negative
I don't get exactly what you mean, but a calm dog won't be holding it's tail, the tail will just flop and relax. Could you please show me the exact spot in the video where you think the dog is stressed because I can't find it?@@watchmoivies123
Unrelated to the content, I see your thermostat says 62. Are you a polar bear?
Why is she wearing a mask?
She lives in fear .
Just maybe she has a bad cough/cold and doesn’t want to share it!
Training a dog with a mask on 🙄
asd123
Very inhumane to make that woman wear a muzzle.
why is this woman wearing a mask ffs, this is only inhibiting the dog from reading you properly smh
who knows maybe she was sick.
Or a good way to find out if your dog actually does understand a verbal command. Shouldn’t need any lipreading or body signals if so
I would recommend not wearing masks under the circumstances. Masks impede visual and audible communication between the wearer and others, especially in schooling situations.
Also cloth masks actually spread disease more than no mask, because saliva etc gets caught in the mask and is then aerosolized when breathing, spreading the germs much more efficiently than with no mask. Also it doesn't prevent the wearer from inhaling the air unless if it seals properly against the face. But yeah. Don't wear a skimask for social interactions is a pretty solid piece of advice without getting into the germ scare part of it
There's the fear factor. It saddens me to see, but at this point people that do that really have succumbed to the fear and just don't want to think that they've been lied to, while the perpetrators laugh all the way to the bank and maintain their growing seats of power
@@underduress5761yup it’s a disgrace to our education system that so many people can be deceived easily.
Covid is still a thing guys. 🙄
Let people make their own decisions.
I Would recommend wearing masks if you aren’t 100% well or getting over an illness (if you are unable to stay home for whatever reason).
Can never understand this weird stigma against masks. Shameful really , and lastly?
Yes, we need younger people who know a thing or two (and aren’t criminals fyi) to run a governing body.
With all that said, I said my piece. Good day.
@@underduress5761or perhaps they are sick and don't want to spread anything....
I can't take this lady with the mask seriously.
Why is she wearing that mask??
Actually, none of your business.
@@Dognerdca by watching the video it became my business, and I'm perfectly entitled to comment. I'm not being offensive just asking why someone is doing something that to me seems quite strange.
So wind your neck in.
@@MrDynamart no it is not your business. Why on earth would you even need to know?
@@Dognerdca 🤫🤫
Wearing a mask and trying to train your dog is a bit foolish. Your dog more confused.
WHF!! You're NOT EVEN a dog trainer how are you going to train other people to be a dog trainer!.
Who would you say is a dog trainer?
@@BDTrainingYour techniques and professionalism are inspiring! Go, Team Beckman!
@@BDTraining The training industry is already a shit show!! You FK, DD if there is a trainer that someone could learn from would be Cesar. Haha what are you going to show people your hand shack method!? Have people trying that idiotic idea and someone get bit.
@@zuzuspetals8323 Hahaha unbelievable!
@chrisr-m6568 where are your dog training videos to show us how its done?
Hi Joel! This is Craig and Julian from Northern California....where can I find out more info on The Beckman Coaching Program that you've mentioned in this video?
I'm very interested in what it offers.
Thank you so much.