1. Sign up for and attend every session of a basic Dog Training course lasting at least one month.
2. After that, sign up for the the higher level course.
3. After that, sign up for the next higher level course if available.
Labs are intelligent and easy to train, but they are large dogs and need formal training. Be SURE that your dog training course teacher uses something called "positive training."
While all of this is going, do your homework training your dog at home, too.
In addition, socialize your dog. Take him or her on at least one long walk per day (this is required: you shouldn't be allowed to own a dog if you can't take him or her for a walk once a day, every day). Also, take him or her to safe places to meet other well socialized dogs and different kinds of people. Maybe take walks downtown sometimes, in the country at other times, in residential areas, in commercial areas, etc. Your dog needs to see as many different kinds of situations and people as possible.
Dogs, like humans can be trained at any stage of life, you just have to deal with them where they are not where you are. Young dogs have little attention spans and lots of energy, old dogs have long attention spans but not a lot of energy; use these characteristics to make your training fun for both of you.
The, so far, best ways to train animals are called lure and cue or 'clicker' training. Lure relies on an animal to follow a potential treat to be moved to a specific position, then the animal is cued ('good dog' and the treat is given). Clicker training is tougher but the pair (trainer, trainee) can create much much more complex trained behaviors.
With clicker training a series of goals is prepared by the trainer and each will lead to the next in 'shaping' the behavior wanted. The animal is first taught that the clicker (or whistle or snap or ...) signals that a treat is forthcoming. In the beginning it must be delivered every time. After a number of times (trainers choice), the treats come in random groups: 1 time 1 treat, next time 3 treats, next time 2 treats, and so on. The period of time used is directly related to the age of the animal, young keep it short 5-10 mins at most, old, up to 20 mins per session (usually 1 session per day.)
After the animal starts to catch on that cue (click, whistle, snap) means "treats", the trainer will try a few "no-shows" - when they receive the cue, animal does the animal instantly look for the treats? If so you can now move on to the next stage, the first part of the behavior. If looking to train an animal to fetch, once the cue = treats you reward positive behavior i.e. watch for the animal to move towards the item that the trainer wants delivered. Let the animal wander a bit and every time they head that direction - cue:treat. Always work from positive, that is, don't push them, let them figure it as they go.
After the animal is headed towards the thing to be retrieved over and over, stop cuing and treating just for going to it. Now you are looking for them to touch it. Generally they will attempt the old behavior (walking to it) and will randomly hit it; cue: BIG treat. Now the animal gets confused but most times retries whatever they just did: cue-treat! The animal now tries the new behavior over and over. Remember to keep the sessions short, and reduce the treat level when you are consistently getting the wanted behavior.
Now move to the next goal, here getting their nose near the object. Make sure to no longer cue-treat for touching the object, you are now cue-treating for touching with the nose. Rinse and repeat till you get them almost pushing it around. Now try for putting open mouth on it.
This set of cue-treat works with ANY animal with the right treat. Humans, dogs, cats, chickens, anything - you just have to deal with the limitations of the animal and your own limitations.
As to speed of learning, old animals (people, dogs, cats...) have a slower time learning because they have more connections already there in their head and it takes a while for new things to get settled in. Young animals have less connections and less to change in their heads so 'learning' is faster. ALL animals (non-brain damaged) can learn, you just have to be a friend, not a commander. Note this has worked for dogs 3 months old, 3 years old, 17 years old. It has worked with Orcas, Dolphins, cats, chickens..... Every animal that can learn can do so all it's life.
There is no yelling, no shoving the animal around, no punishment - positive works and works best. Unless there is harm about to come to a human otherwise, use no other method: you waste your time and the dogs.
if you want to train your dog you NEED to be patient. Rome wasnt built in a day and your dog wont be trained that quickly either. First, decide what you want to train them to do. If they are a puppy what i would suggest is to teach them how to sit, stay, and come. For sit, what i did with my dog is you take a peice of dog food and put it kinda by their face so that they know what it is. Then tell them to sit. Since they have no clue what there doing with you other hand push down gently so they understand what to do. When they sit give them the food. For any of the others i would suggest going to the library or searching on the internet. You cn find lots of great websites. I know i did.
Lots of treats and patience.
A Labrador becomes an adult at approximately 2 years of age.
they believe gold comes out out once a year- im a dog expert im dr.polianai
2 mixes- one is a Husky-Labrador the other is Australian Heeler and Lab
if you mean babysitting, yes! most girls are responsible enough to babysit 1-3 kids when they are 12. i know of a 12year old and a 14 year old that co-babysit for 6 children ages 1/2-10 years old
If a horse is said to be rising 3, that means that the horse is a 2 year old but is nearly 3. In this same way, a rising 4 year old is a 3 year old that is nearly 4 and so on.
Certainly.
Let them see how it is done
yes he/she can
One recommendation would be a toy train from Growing Tree Toys. It is called My First RC GO Train and it costs about $23.00. It is recommended for children ages 2 years old and up.
do it when there young ! it's hard to train a dog out of their old habits. ive had 2. one was super well trained. my 6 year old one right now, is not D:
1 to 2 or maybe 3 hours a day depending on the child's size
A 9 month old male Labrador might appear to have 2 sets of testicles because he has swelling or damage to the testicles. He might also have a bite or infection that causes the area to appear doubled.
you tell him hess out of diapers then you sit on the potty as an example then he should do it mommy does the example or else they dont do it
Dinosaur Train - 2009 Old Reliable 2-42 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
2 years is way too young for a dog to start to hunt anything! Try to start to let he or she hunt at age 5.
Puppies stop the majority of their growing once they reach about one year old. They continue to grow until they are about 2 years old, but at a much slower pace. After two years old, they fill out and gain more muscle mass.
It was very sad. He suffered from depression and his 2 year old daughter had recently died, so he commited suicide by running in front of a train.