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Published on Karen Pryor Clickertraining (http://www.clickertraining.com)

Training a Steadfast Recall

By Melissa Alexander
Created 2006-06-01 01:00
Excerpted from Click for Joy: Questions and Answers from Clicker Trainers and their Dogs [0] by Melissa Alexander, an unparalleled guide to the concepts of clicker training [0]. Melissa is also the moderator of ClickerSolutions [1], an online discussion forum.



happy dog running

A recall can save your dog's life. It can stop her from running in front of a car, or from chasing an animal into the woods. It can call your dog away from a tempting but dangerous delicacy she has just discovered.

Getting the behavior [1]

Teaching a recall is easy—just reinforce your dog for coming to you! Start by kneeling a few feet away and making happy noises. Click when the pup takes her first step toward you and give her a yummy treat when she gets to you. Run a few feet away and repeat the process. Make it a fun game! When she's reliably coming to you, start using your cue [1]. Add distance and distractions to the recall just as you would for a sit or other behavior. Calling a young puppy from across the yard when she is exploring a new, interesting scent is setting yourself and your pup up to fail. Walk to within a few feet, kneel down, and call her from there—and make sure to reinforce her for abandoning the distraction with something even better.

Success comes from repetition. Don't increase your distance or distractions until your dog responds immediately and enthusiastically to the recall cue. While you're training, remember to give a super-good reinforcement [1] every time you call your dog.

The collar grab

Click here for video [2]
Click here for video on
teaching "come"

When you call your dog, take hold of her collar before you deliver the reinforcer—and do that every single time. It does you no good to have a recall if you can't then catch your dog, and dogs have been killed because they avoided their owners' hands and at the last moment bolted into the street. Having someone reach out to grab and restrain you is startling at best. Associate reaching and grabbing with good things by feeding a yummy treat once you have a hand on your pet's collar.

Exercises for excellence

Try these recall games to help teach your pet recalls are fun and rewarding:

Tips for success

Keep the following tips in mind as you train your recall and incorporate the recall into everyday life:

Finally, don't take recalls for granted. Remember, your dog's life could depend on the reliability of her response. This means never, ever punish a recall:

About the author Melissa Alexander is a writer and clicker trainer in Seattle, WA. She owns the highly popular ClickerSolutions [4] mailing list and is the author of Click for Joy [4], the award-winning, essential guide to clicker training.

Source URL:
http://www.clickertraining.com/node/309