Dog Training Tricks - Train Your Dog To Retrieve

Teaching your dog to run and retrieve is a very basic and easy training command for it to understand. It is one of the easiest of tasks to train your dog to do, such as pick up a newspaper or a piece of mail, and it’s fun too!

You can begin the exercise by first showing your puppy or dog how to focus on the area in which you want it to retreat from. You do this by simply pointing to the location with your finger. Your goal here is to get your dog to scope out the exact area, while looking for something to bring back to you.

The best way to take care of this first step of retrieve training, is to use little bits and pieces of dog food or dog snacks. Take out the food and just sprinkle two or three treats on the ground. Do not let your dog run to eat the food too fast. In fact, you should first train it to sit and stay until released, then you point to the ground and say “pickup”, “pickup”.

Each time your dog grabs a piece of food, drop another piece behind you and then point while giving the “pickup” command. As you can probably guess, your dog is going to associate the command you are giving it of “pickup” with the notion to look for something to put in its mouth. This part of training does not take long at all, especially if you are using tasty treats and by also training your dog when it is hungry, as this helps to increase its motivation.

The next step is to start throwing smaller non-food items, instead of snacks. For example, after you throw a couple of treats and your dog responds to the “pickup” command, surprise it by tossing a small ball and then point and command it to pick it up, in the exact same manner that you did with the dog treats. By this time it should run to pick up the ball without hesitation and even start to bring it back to you. Be sure to praise it each time it does.

Finally, it is time to teach your dog how to drop the object in front of you after it retrieves it. Once your dog has the ball, or whatever object you are using, it should naturally run back to you expecting praise. Give him the “drop it” command and as you pet its head with one hand, take your other hand and pull the object out of its mouth and drop to the ground. Do this as often as you can. Tie the entire process together by starting from the beginning and tossing a ball for it to retrieve. From now on you will enjoy your dog coming back to you and dropping the object right at your feet, every time!

Dog Tricks - How To Teach Your Dog To Cross Its Paws

A simple trick that you can easily teach your dog or puppy is to have it cross its paws. Many pets will do this by accident. You can easily train your dog to lie down with its paws crossed by following these simple instructions:

Step 1:

Start the exercise with your dog in the down position (of course it should already be trained to do so before attempting the ‘cross paws’ trick)

Step 2:

Now have your dog offer its paw on command. If it does not know how to respond to this command, simply reach out and grab one of its paws. Be sure to click once (using a clicker) and offer a small treat each time. It is important that your dog remains in the down position while doing this.

TIP: If it still struggles to understand how to give you its paw, simply use the treat and place it in the palm of your hand a few inches a way from one of its paws. Soon enough, it will naturally move to touch the treat that is in your hand hoping you will release the tasty snack. Be sure to click each time it taps your palm.

Step 3:

Continue having your dog offer its paw, but be sure to concentrate only on one paw at a time and do so repetitively with a click and a treat.

Step 4:

When your dog has reached the stage where you can rely on it targeting your hand with one of its paws, slowly move your hand closer to your dog’s other front paw. Now in order to offer you its paw, it must lift it up and move it over sideways in order to reach your hand.

What may happen is that it may choose to lift the opposite paw instead of continuing with the trained paw. Each time this happens, all you have to do is pull away your hand and simply ignore this response from your dog.

Step 5:

When your dog can target your hand as it has moved to the opposite side, near its other paw, quickly snap your hand back at the last second. His moved paw should now land right over the other paw and in a crossed-paw fashion. Be sure to click and offer a treat.

Step 6:

Continue repeating this training regimen and each time his paw crosses over, slowly fade your hand away so it is further from the dog. Eventually, your dog will automatically cross his paws when he sees your hand signal, and at increasingly longer distances away from you.

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