Wake and Train K9

Wake and Train K9 Relationship building with you and your canine through; foundation training, structure and obedience. Appointments availability is 7 days a week.
(4)

I will come to you and together we work on real world situations.

10/03/2024

Mobility aid retrieval

Morning walks
06/01/2024

Morning walks

12/19/2023
Wake and train get that brain working!Mae Mae
12/12/2023

Wake and train get that brain working!

Mae Mae

Ready for the day.
12/11/2023

Ready for the day.

Fun classMae Mae
12/10/2023

Fun class

Mae Mae

Waiting at the threshold.
12/08/2023

Waiting at the threshold.

12/06/2023
12/05/2023

Horsesh*t, but it makes for a cute meme 🙂..

99% of people walking through our doors with out of control, reactive aggressive dogs are contientious owners that have given their dog nothing but love and affection since it came into their lives. The problem is you don’t love away genetic predisposition that drives everything from social behavior to what the dog finds rewarding or aversive. You train the dog, you show him what he can do and what he must not do. You create a black and white world for him to live in where he is in no doubt about what behavior is desired vs undesired and you set him up for success. You do this because you love him and want him to live his best life.

12/03/2023
We in group class.
12/01/2023

We in group class.

10/27/2023

Random dog vs Mace and I ❤️💯

10/27/2023

10/02/2023

❀⸜(˶´ ˘ `˶)⸝❀

05/16/2023

Directional Pressure

The leash and collar is the device we use to communicate with dogs. Whether that collar is a buckle, martingale, chain, prong, or electronic, it is still accompanied by a leash that acts as a conduit for information that flows both ways.

People tend to respond by jerking on the leash when the dog pulls. The dog usually pulls harder. The harder the dog pulls, the volume of the pressure generally increases.

What people don't realize is that they are creating that pressure, and the dog is simply trying to escape it.

We have all seen the dog scrabbling at the end of a leash in a frenzy to get anywhere but near its owner. The owner is hanging on for dear life as their dog vaults down the street, executing the best impression of the Naruto run, choking and gagging like they are going to pass out. The owner blithely follows along behind because they don't comprehend that they are actually reinforcing pulling behavior.

The dog is secured by an ever shortening leash, held in a death grip by the bewildered human, who has absolutely no idea that they are contributing to the erratic, hysterical pulling simply because they are pulling back, or at least, continuing to create resistance through the leash.

They never allow the dog the opportunity to escape the pressure.

I have yet to meet a dog that didn't have a powerful oppositional reflex. The very first thing a young dog does when the leash is attached to the collar around its neck is to fight it.

It's our job to teach them how to accept it.

Throughout training, we apply pressure in a variety of different directions. It's important to identify how pressure helps dogs comprehend what it is we ask of them in contextual ways.

When we teach -sit- for example, the leash and collar are held in such a way that we leverage pressure in an upward pattern with the collar, and downward with a hand on the dogs' rump simultaneously. Our message is "sit!" The dog learns how to do this because physics dictates the dog do so, in order to alleviate the pressure. Training creates a series of signals that alert the dog to a required response.

Every behavior we teach is through the application of some form of directional pressure.

To the dog, the signals he registers are the hand placements that preempt that application; the hand placement for the sit cues the dog that sit is expected, before the command is even uttered. Same for down, stand, and stay. Our practiced movements become cues that the next event requires a specific form of participation.

What people don't realize is that dogs read the context of that pressure literally.

If the dog has been conditioned that upward pressure is "sit," applying upward pressure in any other context becomes confusing. If a dog is learning "down," it would make no sense to the dog if the pressure was being delivered in a way that draws its motion in any other direction but downward.

Training should occur in a way that creates a common language between humans and dogs. The training isn't so much to "fix" dogs, but to give humans a means of overcoming the communication barrier between the two species. We may be endowed with speech and opposable thumbs, but dogs are gifted with a sensitivity that defies our cumbersome, inelegant attempts at communication.

We hobble dogs with our devices and yank them around without observing what they are trying to tell us.

The devices we use to communicate are there to help broadcast our meaning in a salient way. By careful manipulation of directional pressure, we can help dogs understand how to move and when. It's when that directional pressure is contradictory, do we see confusion or conflict.

The leash is there to prevent escape or avoidance. It doesn't really need to do much more than be attached to a dog and a thoughtful human. The type of collar determines the amount of pressure applied to the dog at any given point.

Directional pressure isn't initiated as punishment. It's simply a tactic to help a dog determine how to move in order to relieve that pressure. It's not the volume that matters as much as the direction and the constance. Rarely should it have to increase, and it should never be violent. It just needs to last longer than the resistance put up to oppose it.

A lot of attention is given to the concept of "pressure/release," but precious little is spent understanding the importance of directional pressure and how it affects performance.

The context of directional pressure is singularly the most difficult concept to teach handlers, whether they have handled many dogs or are just starting out. The instinctual draw towards oppositional reflex is strong in both species. In order for our dogs to learn not to fight pressure, we need to stop creating it.

03/25/2023

Address

San Antonio, TX

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+12102918474

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Wake and Train K9 posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Wake and Train K9:

Videos

Share

Category