Ask the trainer: teaching your dog to come when called





Video: How to Train your Dog to Come When Called

Dear Kevin,
My Afghan Hound, Zeph comes when called – if he feels like it. He knows what I am asking but whether he actually comes seems to depend on his current whim. If he knows I really want him that is when he is most likely to head in the other direction – or at least just out of reach. Any suggestions?
-Linda

Hi Linda,

This is a common problem. I am going to recommend kind of starting from the beginning. What you’ll need is a long leash (30-50ft) and some high value rewards. The long leash comes in handy because it doesn’t allow Zeph to rehearse the old habit of not coming when called. What you’ll do is call him, if he chooses not to come, you will then start to reel him in. (use as little pressure as possible.) Typically once they feel a tiny bit of tension in that direction they start running right towards you. Once he gets to you reward his behavior with that high value reward. I try to always keep rewards out of sight. If you constantly have them in sight he may only choose to come when he sees something. If he does choose to come all on his own when you call him, give him some extra rewards.

Video: How to Teach Your Dog to Come When Called

I think a game that will benefit you greatly is calling him to you, rewarding him, and then telling him to basically go away. The idea behind the going away part is that he gets to go back and do what he was doing prior to you calling him. At this point it sounds like he knows that you are going to “ruin the fun” when you call him so he is choosing not to come. By practicing calling him to you, rewarding him, and then sending him on his way, he will start coming more reliably every time.

Remember to practice in an environment initially that isn’t too distracting. A good starting point is inside a home. When he is doing great inside, I recommend moving outside to the most boring part of your yard. Continue on with the training until he is doing as close to perfect as possible. When that happens move on to a tougher environment.

To sum everything up, it is about breaking the old habit (not coming when called) and creating the new habit (coming when called.) Using the long leash allows you to break the old habit. If you choose not to use the long leash the old habit will remain and you will not get the desired results you are looking for. Lastly, to teach a dog urgency, what I do is give more rewards for the louder I have to raise my voice. For instance if I yell “come” at the top of my lungs, and then the dog comes and gets a ton of rewards, he is going to start coming even faster when I yell. Once again I just teach that for urgent situations like if you are doing off leash hiking and your dog is 50 feet in front of you and you come across another dog/person. When I yell, “come” it is urgent and I need him to come back. In his mind when he hears me yelling he is going to think about all the reinforcement that comes with it.

Here is a video to help!

Thank you for the question!
Kevin Duggan CPDT-KA

Kevin is a Certified Professional Dog Trainer through the Certification Council for Professional Dog Trainers (CCPDT.org)  and is a Canine Good Citizen Evaluator through the American Kennel Club. He currently resides in Ohio with his dog, V, a six-year-old Shepherd/Lab mix, where he operates All Dogs Go To Kevin, LLC, specializing in helping build positive relationships between humans and their canine companions using clear communication, not pain and fear. For more training tips and tricks, and to meet his amazing dog, V,  follow him on Facebook by clicking here.

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