Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

The 66 Club

Public β€’ 78 β€’ Free

3 contributions to The 66 Club
Day 4 - Some more lead walking
Dillon starting to get the hang of close walking and we did around 300 yards on pavements, with close and a few leave it commands without breaking. Some success this morning as he turned perfectly onto the cycle path without losing heel and didnt freeze, so possibly starting to break the fear/anticipation of going onto the cycle path where he often meets dogs. Towards the end of the lead walk, turning back on the pavement area, some improvement here also with less freezing and less coaxing needed. I recognise that the fear/freeze situation where he meets dogs (that he's not familiar with) will be a longer term challenge, but good to see he's becoming less fearful of actually moving into the area where he meets dogs on the cycle path. Close walking on grass also likely more of a challenge for Dillon due to the smells around.
1
0
Day 2 Lead Walking
Decided to build on the lead walking training of yesterday. Not many people out and about on this cold morning which so possibly less challenge than yesterdy for Dillon. That said the first section of the walk using regular close commands, along pavements, went really well and Dillon stayed in the close positon throughout with only one leave it command, that was good, and all without any treats. There are two areas on the walk where Dillon freezes, the turn onto the cycle track and towards the end of the walk where the cycle track splits. I think these are both fear related where Dillon anticipates danger around from previous experience. So definitely an area to work on in the coming weeks. Will look to do some different training in the next few days
5
3
New comment 2d ago
1 like β€’ 2d
Yes, often go to Ashton Court, lower end, for off the lead walk. If he comes across a dog coming towards him he will often freeze and then runs away from the danger to a safer place and waits for me. He used to do that on the Sunday social walks where he would run away from bigger dogs. Now that he is more confident and also knows most of the dogs, he won’t run away but you can see him manoeuvring and giving some dogs a wider berth.
Day 1
So Day 1 is here, thanks Nick for the opportunity to join. I chose today to go for a circular walk from home, roughly half of the distance on pavements (not a particularly busy area) and half on a cycle/footpath on the edge of a wooded area (lovely country environment). The walk is close to half a mile so on my own it takes around 8 minutes to complete. The challenge today was lead walking. Dillon as a 3 year old (Romanian) rescue is a friendly dog but sensitive to the outside world, probably conditioned by his early months on the streets. The plan today was to get him to heel walk. Dillon likes to sniff and smell. Today when he wanted to stop and sniff, on most ocasssions I asked him to leave so we had lots of leave training. My experience today was he did always move on after the leave command, sometimes in a few seconds and sometimes it would take longer, perhaps a minute or more. Today, Dillon as per norm, will stop/freeze when someone on their own or with a dog comes towards us, and will usually stay in that position until they have passed. Sometimes he will want to look back at them when they've passed so it takes even longer to move on. So one issue is getting Dillon moving (once he's seen someone) when in his mind he perhaps sees danger in people and dogs. He is motivated by food but this is more difficult at the moment as the vet says he has stomach issues (possibly IBD like) and we now have him on a hydrolysed diet and we havent, as yet, found a suitable treat that he likes. Anyway we had a great walk, he's great with people and dogs if not a little anxious on first meeting them. For the record the walk took around 23 minutes. And he had a fantastic mental workout. I have a number of questions/challenges to get him, from his background, to being a great lead walker. By the way, he's made great progress, in the early days it was hard to even get him out the front door and would be completely spooked by things like bikes and pushchairs (thank Livvy for your great help).
6
2
New comment 3d ago
0 likes β€’ 3d
Nick, thanks for your tips. On the sniffing, yes I'll settle for the 'whats suits you'. I want to move Dillon away from 'every five feet' to 'now and then' without being too rigid on it, see also below. The fear will be a big challenge for Dillon, and we can try the off lead walking as a means of addressing it, coupled with some food motivation. Just back from an evening lead walking training session - did the same walk as this morning. First half of the walk was uneventful as we met no-one. Dillon wanted to sniff as usual and I did this half of the walk with leave it/no sniffing. I found that he responded well and most of the time moved forward again after just a second or two of the leave it command, so I think/hope that more of this training will be fruitful. About half way round the walk we met a lady with two reactive dogs on short leads. I asked the lady to come past me as Dillon had gone into freeze mode, and one of the dogs tried hard (without success) to get to Dill. This affected Dillon, and he was still in freeze mode well after the dogs had past. I remembered some earlier training, and allowed Dillon to sniff at this point, and this successfully reset his brain and we then walked on. We came across a another dog walker coming towards us, this time Dillon went a little way towards the dog (ie not a complete freeze) which was positive. For Dillon it probably helped that it was a smaller dog. Finished the walk in around 18 mins.
1-3 of 3
Kathy Jackson
2
8points to level up
@kathy-jackson-2624
I joined this group as my Romanian rescue Dillon spends more time sniffing than heeling when out on walks. We adopted him two and a half years ago.

Active 12m ago
Joined Jan 5, 2025
powered by