Jump to content

Ndtf Vs Delta Dog Training Course?


 Share

Recommended Posts

But sometimes we also need to take into consideration not just the effect on the particular dog we are training, we might need to take into account the safety or wellbeing of the people, or another dog, or the cat maybe (depending on what the behaviour is that we are trying to change).

Yeah, but the people at least are easy. You can outright ask them if they are happy or feel safe. I would look for similar behavioural indicators in other species as well. It's not hard to find them if you start looking. One of my doves is having a hard time with my other dove at the moment. They are fighting. One is apparently not bothered but the other I assume is. There are obvious indicators like he's vigilant around the other bird, but there are general changes that should be red flags as well. Like he got more flighty. He's easier to startle than he used to be and his flight distance is longer. It's very upsetting. I was going to rehome one, but have decided to try adding a hen instead. Pretty sure my dove is crying inside. I can only assume people whose doves cry probably go to hell.

Anyway, cats will do the same sort of things. Flight distance and tendency to bolt are quite telling. I always found it to be so with my hare as well. And recovery time. It's always going to be a balance of a number of factors. That's just good training, and where people find the balance will differ. I think that this is not a problem, which again is why the idea of quadrant-based training annoys me. The problem is not the quadrant, it's judging how it affects the parties involved. Objectively!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 104
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

I get the gist of what you're saying Corvus - small sample size, multiple variables per trial and non-independence between trials all mean you can't draw valid conclusions from the results.

Right. :)

I'm not clear on what the nose pokes are indicating tho - are you thinking they are a stress behaviour, or a part of natural doggy expression that get diminished when he is unhappy or unsettled generally?

Oh, Erik is a chronic poker. There's usually a background level, but the frequency and what he pokes changes. Generally if the frequency goes up and stays up he's not a happy camper in general. Figure out what his problem is and it goes down again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Corvus - I think understand what you are saying.

From a personal perspective, you challenge the assumptions and decisions I make (often unconsciously) about how I train my dog. You ask that I think (really, really think) about what I'm doing. You ask for objectivity (as far as is humanly possible). You ask for measurable outcomes.

Right. Yay! :)

FWIW - I think your approach and perspective (while definitely admirable) - is far, far beyond the average professional dog trainer (let alone the average pet owner). There aren't many Bob Baileys out there, teaching dogs not to bark at the front door.

Yeah, maybe it is. But I'm not asking people to emulate me. I just want them to think twice before they assume what they are doing is what they think they are doing. There is always another (or several other) critters involved that don't have a voice. At the end of the day we all have to make a decision and we probably won't know how it's going to turn out until we do it. That's okay, because that's life. We make of it what we will. It's hard to ask our voiceless partners in training what they feel about it all, but that doesn't mean we speak for them. Maybe we just reserve judgement until we can figure out how to hear them. Reserving judgement leaves you open-minded and maybe more likely to see the evidence either way that having made a judgement call might otherwise blind you to. I think that's a fair compromise, and something that everyone can do.

I figure decisiveness is for training, analysis for afterwards, and open-mindedness forever.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh, Erik is a chronic poker. There's usually a background level, but the frequency and what he pokes changes. Generally if the frequency goes up and stays up he's not a happy camper in general. Figure out what his problem is and it goes down again.

Gotcha, thanks :) Also, very cute :p

--

I don't think this thread has gone as far OT as it may first appear, since the repeated discussion when someone asks "NDTF or Delta?" is about Delta 'only teaching part of dog training'. The argument has been made that if you really want to be all things to all people, doing a Cert. level course alone isn't going to get you there, regardless of who you do it with. I've studied animals formally for 8 years and have been researching them for money for 2 years and I still learn more about them every day :) - and I'm in a much more straightforward field than behaviour, which will keep many many people employed for a long time!

Philosophy aside, I think that there are segments in the marketplace for both Delta and NDTF trainers (and a bunch of other approaches). If one or the other is what you are happier practicing and you wish to be able to provide that affiliation on your marketing, then you will attract like-minded clients.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1344253014[/url]' post='5921901']
1344248264[/url]' post='5921779']

Sorry to stay OT, but wouldn't keeping the counter clear of surfing rewards also worked?

Also sorry to stay OT!

I was managing this behavior, no food on the benches when I went out!

Unfortunately, to a Labrador, apparently pain killers are food..

I think managing a behaviour can be really dangerous, I slipped up Once. Only once. It landed both my dogs at the emergency vet.

I'm so sad for what happened to you boys but wouldn't putting the meds up and safely away in cabinets prevented this? I've never had this problem, although never had a Lab, maybe having children makes me more careful with meds?

I thought I was being careful though, nothing edible is left on benches. Riddick had been left out of his crate for 4 days in a row, nothing happened.

I placed the meds above the bench, ontop of the microwave. Not even thinking that would equal in reach. But I was wrong.

If I had addressed the issue when I first knew about it, rather than trying to tip toe around and manage it instead, this never would have happened. Thats what I mean about management being inherently dangerous. It relies too much on people being perfect.

Each to their own, like I said before I am sure there were many ways that you could have trained it, this just worked best for me and there is nothing wrong with how I trained it.

Yah, but how do you know when you only tried one thing? What happened to what's best for dog and handler? Now it's just what's best for you? Did Daisy think the e-collar was best? Assuming it was Daisy who was in trouble again.

Rhetorical questions and I'm not picking on the method or you in particular, I'm trying to get people to think critically about their training decisions and why they make the ones they do and how they can tell it was a good decision after the fact. We have to be accountable at some point.

On management... it's not inherently dangerous. Failed management is dangerous. I'd far rather depend on a leash and harness than a recall, but if the leash snaps I have good recalls to fall back on. Hopefully the leash won't snap! I've had prey animals in the same house as very predatory dogs. I factored in failed management and had two levels of management in place for the times when someone left a door open accidentally. Never had a close call. A couple of months ago Erik swallowed a fish hook attached to a couple of metres of fishing twine on the beach. Can't tell him to leave it if we didn't see him pick it up. The week before he had a tooth extracted after fracturing it on something or other. While we were overseas one of the dogs he was staying with took a piece out of his ear. Stuff happens. Failing to anticipate disaster is not a failure of management. It's just bad luck.

Edited 'cause I'm tired and sick of it.

Failed management is different than plain bad luck. I don't see failed management as bad luck. Its just human nature. No person is perfect. Every single one of us has done something silly, changed lanes without checking. Left the keys in the door and had to walk all the way back from the train station. Forgot our wallets at home.

That's not bad luck, that's just part of being human. Nobody is perfect, management relies on perfection. Sometimes it might work yes. Then others it doesn't, and it ends in total disaster.

Say you have a large aggressive dog, instead of taking this dog to a trainer because you don't like that idea, you decide to work around the aggression. You walk your dog at odd hours, you double bolt the gates with signs everywhere. The dog is in his crate whenever people are around. The list of management related ideas goes on.

Then one day, 2 or 3 things go wrong. You're in a hurry, and you don't lock the gate properly. Then the delivery guy comes early while you're still out, got to enter the back gate, finding it only bolted but not locked. Your large dog gets out as someone is walking past with their toy poodle. Your large dog attacks and kills that poodle.

Is that bad luck? Or management failing due to natural human error. Bad luck is being the poodle owner, who just happened to walk past at the wrong moment.

Edited by lovemesideways
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Regardless of method, some dogs will always need management. Even if you now train riddick to never get on the benchtops, ii doubt you'll ever leave the mess there again? I hope that doesn't sound like I'm having a go because I'm not! I have a dog that will never be allowed to play with strange dogs. Ever. Yet I have seen behaviourists and continue to train her. She has improved greatly but I expect to manage her for life.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm the same as megan - I have a dog aggro dog that will have to be managed for life (she is nearly 13 years old now!). I continue to train her and work with her (mostly fun drive related stuff learned from SG) but she will never be allowed to play with strange dogs. I can introduce her to puppies that will live with me (she is fine with Diesel and Kaos who were introduced as puppies).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Regardless of method, some dogs will always need management. Even if you now train riddick to never get on the benchtops, ii doubt you'll ever leave the mess there again? I hope that doesn't sound like I'm having a go because I'm not! I have a dog that will never be allowed to play with strange dogs. Ever. Yet I have seen behaviourists and continue to train her. She has improved greatly but I expect to manage her for life.

I'm the same as megan - I have a dog aggro dog that will have to be managed for life (she is nearly 13 years old now!). I continue to train her and work with her (mostly fun drive related stuff learned from SG) but she will never be allowed to play with strange dogs. I can introduce her to puppies that will live with me (she is fine with Diesel and Kaos who were introduced as puppies).

Both are good points, and you're right even with all the training I will be putting in, I wont be just leaving things out willy nilly.

I guess I would say that, Management alone is dangerous, but in combination with work and training its the best you can do. I still think management by itself is inherently dangerous though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think if you have chronic bench surfers and are not prepared or happy to use a management plan, the best alternative choice would be be scat mats. Using an e collar relys on management, you need to be watching, my reason for not agreeing with it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Using an e collar relys on management, you need to be watching.

All training requires you to watch the dog...

A scat mat?

You got me there - but a scat mat is poor training. I would almost consider it management. I used something similar to a scat mat initially on our dalmatian and she just learnt to jump around it.

Teaching the dog not to jump onto any bench, or any sofa is a much better way of training.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Using an e collar relys on management, you need to be watching.

All training requires you to watch the dog...

A scat mat?

You got me there - but a scat mat is poor training. I would almost consider it management. I used something similar to a scat mat initially on our dalmatian and she just learnt to jump around it.

Teaching the dog not to jump onto any bench, or any sofa is a much better way of training.

How would you train it without an e-collar?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Using an e collar relys on management, you need to be watching.

All training requires you to watch the dog...

A scat mat?

You got me there - but a scat mat is poor training. I would almost consider it management. I used something similar to a scat mat initially on our dalmatian and she just learnt to jump around it.

Teaching the dog not to jump onto any bench, or any sofa is a much better way of training.

How would you train it without an e-collar?

Our dally is soft as :p

I just have to say ah a few times and she'll never do anything again. She also generalises her training (sometimes a little too much) without me needing to. Teaching her not to jump on one bench will stop her from jumping on every bench in the house.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would guess that the main factor in training against countersurfing is how much reinfocement the dog has had for it in the past. In Huski's case she said the dog had a strong history of it so that would make it so much harder to break.

In my house we eat all our meals at a low coffee table (kelpie nose-height) right in the middle of 3 couches and 2 dog beds which is where our dog spend about 85% of their time during the day. I'm not really interested in moving my plate everytime I take my eyes off the table. Like NotMidol said I spent time when they fist arrived saying "ah" and redirecting them to their mat or one of the couches when they sniffed at our food, but I think the most important training thing we do is heaps (a few times every day) of self-control exercises around food - putting that mental space in between seeing the food and eating the food where they have to decide if it's appropriate or not - so just because they can see it doesn't mean they can have it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I taught my two previous dogs not to steal food using "doggy zen" (outline in Sue Ailsby's "Training Levels"). They were impeccably mannered their entire lives and I made no effort not to leave food even on the coffee table or while I was out of the room. One of them did begin to steal food from my daughter because she would leave her plate on the floor (food on the floor was fair game).

But while those two dogs were young I was a dedicated trainer. I do not expect the same dedication of every client, although many are quite dedicated once they see what is possible. My current dog came as a counter-surfer (and bin thief) and I have only used management with him, which has been fine. But if I do leave food on the kitchen bench he would probably steal it and I would only blame myself.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share


×
×
  • Create New...