| Dog Training - Most Dogs Need Training And Here's Why |
| Written by Carl Covason | ||||||||
| Tuesday, 09 March 2010 | ||||||||
|
Your life is going exactly as planned. You have a great family, nice house, a carrier you love, and you have even gotten a dog.
Your life is going exactly as planned. You have a great family, nice house, a carrier you love, and you have even gotten a dog. You wake up bright and early but you have a big smile on your face. You have an entire hour of peace and quite all to yourself to wake up and get ready for work before you have to get the kids up. You start a fresh pot of coffee quietly singing towards yourself. The wonderful smell of coffee is starting to waft around the house and you can not help but to think to yourself how incredibly lucky you are. Out of the corner of your eye you spot your neighbor taking their little dog out for a morning stroll. You get to thinking that maybe you should take your dog out also to get some fresh air and a bit of exercise. Just then, as if on Que, your dog springs into action and flies over to the window. The hair on his back looks like a porcupines and he lets out a low warning growl. You only have a second to respond before he really lets loose with the barking and you know he is going to wake up the whole house. As you are making every effort to quite him the baby starts screaming like a banshee and your older children slowly emerge from their rooms. All you can do is stare at your beautiful children because you know that within minutes the house will be in chaos and you didn't even get to drink your first cup of coffee, let alone get ready for work. Any thoughts on relaxing before the day really began have been dashed. That's it you think. That dog needs dog training, barking at all hours of the day has got to go. Getting your dog trained has been in the back of your mind all day. You go about working a bit frazzled since your morning went just as you thought it would after your kids were woken up, total chaos. You pick your kids up after work just in time for them to start falling apart. After all they were woken up an hour early this morning. You unlock your door and file them all in. As you walk through the door your dog comes flying at you to show you just how much you were missed today. You barely manage to stay upright as he jumps on you. You have a new demand to add to your dog training, jumping has to go as well. You manage to calm your dog down long enough for him to stop jumping and then you see it... right in the middle of your living room carpet your dog has dug a big hole. You look at your dog with daggers in your eyes and notice your kids are forming a circle around your dog. They are all giving you that pleading look because they don't want you angry at their dog. After all, the dog did not mean to do it and he is really very sorry. All you can think is that dog is a nuisance but there is nothing you can do. The children are head over heals in love with their dog and in truth, so are you. Regardless, you have to stop your dog digging holes especially in the middle the living room floor. That is when dog obedience training comes into play. The best way to get your dog to behave is to train him to do so. About the Author: When training a dog 2 of the most common things people want to know is how to stop a dog whining how to stop aggression towards other dogs. Visit safedogobedienceadvice.com, which is a free training a dog resource, for the answers. Views: 62
|
||||||||
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|


Be first to comment this article