When I first took a dog to obedience class, back in the Pleistocene, we were given six weeks to teach our dog to obey five basic commands: sit, down, stay, heel, and come. The behaviors were a given: these are the things any well-trained, obedient dog should be able to do. The important thing was not just doing the behavior, but Obeying the Command No Matter What. Perhaps the most important of all the behaviors, and the most difficult, was the long down. Could your dog lie down and stay down while you walked away? Could he stay there until you came back and told him he could get up? What if his mortal enemy was next to him, or the instructor walked behind him, or some other dog got up and came over to him? Never mind! He'd better not budge! If he moved, we screamed, "No! Down!" and rushed back and jerked him into position again.
ClickerExpo
Animal Lovers' Holiday
By Karen Pryor on 01/08/2007Sure, ClickerExpo is all about training. But plenty of people come who aren't trainers. Some of them have some other professional reason to come; they're veterinarians, or manufacturers, or journalists. Some people are just there because their Significant Other wanted to come; or, like one teenager I met last year, because they were brought along to babysit a litter of puppies in the hotel room.