Dog Training Nation

In Dogs We Trust

  • Home
  • Training
    • Dogs
    • Puppies
    • Clients
  • Behavior
    • Breeds
  • Health
  • Safety
  • Resources
    • Equipment
    • Books
  • Dog Training Videos
  • About
You are here: Home / Archives for Training

Open Letter to Cesar Millan’s Fans From Dog Trainers

March 22, 2016 by Fanna Easter

Cesar Millan’s Dog Training Methods are Wrong

Cesar Millan Dog Training
Michael Warren/iStock

My goal is not to offend or accuse anyone. I want to have an honest conversation about the latest controversy pertaining to Cesar Millan’s latest TV episode, featuring a known pig-killing dog attacking a pig. I know many Cesar Millan’s fans feel he did nothing wrong and that he saved the dog’s life and the pig recovered, but there’s a bit more to it than that.

As a professional dog trainer, I would like to discuss this topic from what I actually see in the video, which will verify that all is actually not right. Before you become frustrated with my observations, I ask Cesar fans to at least read and understand why so many dog trainers are upset with Cesar Millan.

Be Wary of Edited Footage

TV programs are heavily edited to create a perception for a targeted audience, so small segments are pieced together to only show successful events. Be careful to assume when watching TV footage. Dog trainers notice there are editing gaps in the subject dog’s behavior, but viewers only see a tiny fraction of what is really happening in the dog’s training. Basically, dog trainers know what is happening behind the scenes, which provides a false sense of Cesar’s success at the dog’s expense. That’s why so many of us dog trainers are upset.

All Dog Trainers Save Dog Lives

As dog trainers, our goal is to keep all dogs in their forever homes by teaching them polite manners. About 50% of dog trainers teach reactive (aggressive and fearful) dogs how to navigate through society positively and how to respond differently around triggers. We are just as successful at changing behavior in all aspects as Cesar, but we choose to use positive dog training methods that don’t involve force, pack leadership, alpha status or punishment.

Dog Trainers Are Not Jealous of Cesar

We are most certainly not envious of Cesar’s fame on TV. This is furthest from the truth. Any way to educate the public about the importance of dog training is a huge win! Most dog trainers have an issue with Cesar’s punishment-based dog training methods and not his show. With his TV show’s huge range, Ceasr Millan is teaching pet owners outdated dog training techniques.

The Real Problem

Cesar Millan’s Dog Training Methodology

Our world is full of opinions lately, and everyone has his opinion about what works better than others. Hopefully, I can explain why so many dog trainers are furious with Cesar’s dog training methods. Here it goes!

Many dog trainers feel Cesar’s dog training methods have pushed science-based training methods back into the dark ages. Punishment and force are Cesar’s primary training methods, but they’re no longer necessary since positive reinforcement works quicker and maintains a positive bond between dog and pet owner. Do understand, positive reinforcement training is much more than throwing cookies around. These methods have successfully trained thousands of zoo animals to voluntarily allow blood draws, vet exams, injections, dental exams, nail trims and so much more.

Mistakes Do Happen, But We Must Learn From Them

Oh, mistakes happen. We all make them, but we learn from them and should never allow them to happen again. Many fans claim Cesar had made a mistake, and everyone is fine now. That’s a major misunderstanding, as most dog trainers would never allow that to happen. Our job is to keep everyone safe at all costs. Instead of letting go of the leash, which is basically a safety line for the dog and pig, you can train the dog using barriers or muzzles with better success.

Safety is Vital

Using force or allowing a dog to harm another animal for the sake of dog training is wrong. As dog trainers, we never want to cause harm to any living creature and stand strongly behind this principle.

Back to the Pig

Cesar Millan and his network are claiming the pig recovered well and isn’t suffering from any lasting side effects from the trauma. I would disagree. We all know bullying, either verbally or physically, stays with you for a lifetime. While many people say, “It’s only a pig,” I would say all animals should be treated with respect and should never be subjected to unneeded pain or torture.

Thanks for Listening

So dear fans, I ask you to do more research before assuming one person’s dog training methods work for all dogs. There are newer concepts out there that work quickly and humanely, and promoted by thousands of professionals. Understand, I’m not asking you to choose a side. My goal is to explain my side and the reason successful dog trainers are upset with Cesar’s dog training methods.

Thanks for listening!

Filed Under: Dogs, Training Tagged With: Cesar Millan, cesar millan animal abuse charges, cesar millan dog training, cesar millan puppy training, cesar millan tv show, Cesar millian pig show, dog training, dog training techniques, how to teach a dog, how to train a dog, pack leadership dogs, teach a dog, train a dog

Stop Sharing Outdated Posts About Rescue and Foster Dogs

March 21, 2016 by Fanna Easter

Social Media Etiquette: Sharing is Caring Only If It’s Updated

Social Media Etiquette
DGLimages/iStock

We are flooded with pitiful images of dogs needing to be rescued on social media every day, which can quickly become depressing. With that said, social media has certainly brought awareness to dog rescue and helped many abandoned dogs find their forever homes, but there is a secret social media etiquette on sharing these posts. Check out these social media tips that will make it much easier to narrow down dogs in need while minimizing posts.

Verify a Post is Current Before Sharing

As we’re scrolling through our social media feed, most of us are overcome with sadness when stumbling across a picture of a defenseless dog staring back at us. Immediately, our fingers migrate to the share button, but don’t share yet!

Always verify a post first. Outdated dog rescue and foster dog posts are shared way too often. As an example, at least half of the posts on my social media page are outdated. Before forwarding the post, click on the picture and scan the feedback. Make sure the dog is still available for adoption and the post is current. Too many posts are recycled over and over again for years due to a horrific photo.

Maybe it’s a pet peeve of mine, but sharing outdated posts clogs ups social media feeds and desensitizes people to the faces of dogs truly in need. When someone continuously sees the same tragic photo pop up over a period of time, she eventually learns to ignore it. Then, only the most horrific photos are given attention.

Make sure a post is current and the dog is still up for adoption before sharing with your friends and family.

Add Context Before Sharing

Most people notice the photo, but most will ignore it if details are not readily provided. When sharing posts, add the dog’s location (especially state) and why he or she needs help. Also, note the post is up-to-date and ask others to pass it along.

Please Forward It

So many people choose not to forward posts of dogs in need, which is completely baffling! As an example, my social media page is filled with dog-loving people, yet 1 out of 10 people will share a post of a dog currently in need. This blows my mind!

Please take two seconds of your time to verify a post is updated, add a bit of text and share (even if the dog’s not in your state). You never know who will see it. Every time a rescue dog is shared or tweeted, you’re giving that dog a voice.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE: Proper Pet Store Etiquette for Dogs

Filed Under: Clients, Resources, Training Tagged With: dog rescue social media, dog training, Dog Training Tips, Facebook dog rescue, helping rescue dogs social media, how to teach a dog, how to train a dog, teach a dog, train a dog, twitter dog rescue

My Dog Steals Food From Children

March 18, 2016 by Fanna Easter

How to Keep Your Dog From Stealing Food

Dog Steals Food
Tuned_In/iStock

Dogs are so smart. They can quickly figure out that children are little dispensers of yummy food, so they stick around. Younger children, especially toddlers, drop food often because they’re learning to use their little fingers; and the family dog is right there to pick up any dropped Cheerios or splatters of baby food. The more a dog practices this behavior, the stronger it becomes until a dog steals food from your child’s fingers.

If your dog steals food from your child, check out these tips to prevent (which is always best) and eliminate this dog behavior. If your dog hovers or stares at your child’s food, it’s time to change this behavior now.

Teach Your Child Not to Feed the Dog

When small children offer food to a dog, we all think it’s absolutely adorable until the dog learns to hover around them while they’re eating. While it’s cute now, this dog behavior will most certainly teach your dog to beg for food whenever your child eats. Remember, giving a dog human food does not teach a dog to beg; it’s offering food from a plate that creates begging behavior.

When your child starts offering your dog her food, it’s time to give your dog something else to do instead of accepting food gifts until your child is old enough to understand she shouldn’t share her meals with the dog yet.

For children over 4 years old, ask them not to give or share any food with their dog. Also, if your dog is in the kitchen, keep an eye on him. Better yet, give your dog something else to do instead of hovering around your child while she eats.

Give Your Dog Something Else to Do During Meal Times

During meal times, offer your dog a food stuffed toy to enjoy inside his crate. This keeps your dog happily busy while everyone enjoys her dinner. Plus, it keeps your dog from hovering around your child while she eats. Remember, it takes just one time for your dog to learn that children drop food on the ground, so your dog will come running the moment he hears the clatter of the high chair.

Now, I understand young children snack often, so fill your dog’s food stuffed toys with portions of his daily ration of dog food. If your dog eats one cup per day, divide this into four food stuffed toys by sprinkling ¼ of it with a bit of canned food or peanut butter and freeze overnight. When your child is sitting down for a snack, toss your dog a food stuffed toy to enjoy instead of waiting around for dropped food. Soon, the sound of an opening freezer door will cause your dog to run into the kitchen.

Punishment Doesn’t Work

You’re probably tired of hearing me say this, but it’s so true. Punishment doesn’t work. Yelling or punishing your dog with leash tugs or time outs will only make the food stealing behavior worse. Basically, punishment teaches your dog not to steal food when you’re around. Plus, punishment will tear you and your dog’s relationship apart; it’s not worth it. Punishment is a slippery slope and often the first thing pet owners employ, but it has major fallouts.

Instead of punishing the dog behavior, prevent it from happening by keeping your dog occupied while your toddler eats meals and snacks. Secondly, teach your child not to share meals with your dog. Lastly, if your dog has already learned to hover around your child during meals, give him something else to do instead. Soon, your dog would rather lick a food stuffed toy than hang out under your child’s high chair. This is the best way to change dog behavior permanently.

Filed Under: Behavior, Clients, Training Tagged With: dog steals food from baby, dog steals food from child, dog steals food from hand, dog steals food from kids, dog steals food from my child, dog steals food kid, dog training, Dog Training Tips, dog watches child eat, how to teach a dog, how to train a dog, teach a dog, train a dog, why dog steals food

Finding a Good Dog Groomer in 4 Steps

March 14, 2016 by Fanna Easter

How to Find a Wonderful Dog Groomer

Dog Groomer
scorpp/iStock

Choosing a dog groomer with gentle hands who can trim an amazing doggy haircut is very difficult. Start your search before your dog needs to be groomed, as it can easily take a couple of weeks of research plus an additional couple of weeks for an available appointment. There’s a reason wonderful dog groomers are booked. They are worth the wait!

1. Ask Pet Owners

Luckily, pet owners are thrilled to share their favorite groomer’s information. They’ll also give you an ear full of dog groomers to stay away from. Start a list of leads, and then give them a quick search online. You’ll be shocked to find some groomers with pages of customer complaints or, even worse, an arrest record for animal abuse. This is the time to narrow down your search and expand your driving radius. A good groomer is worth the drive.

2. Stop In and Watch

Once you have a short list of professional dog groomers, it’s time to pop in and watch them work with dogs on the grooming table. So many people say the right words, but their hands tell the entire story. Pop in and ask questions. Tell them you’re looking for a new groomer for your dog. As you tell them about your dog’s coat texture, length, and size, watch how groomers handle each dog on their grooming table.

A groomer’s hands should be gentle and patient; they should not be pushing or pulling a dog’s body. If a dog gets a bit wiggly on the table, the groomer should stop grooming for a second or two and allow the dog to settle before beginning to groom again. Older dogs should be able to sit or lie down, as it’s exhausting for them to stand for an hour. Puppies should be encouraged with treats, lots of patience and short breaks. No dogs should be screaming while being groomed, kenneled or bathed nor have their head strung up on short grooming leads.

Some groomers may disagree with me, and that’s fine, but I want a groomer who makes grooming a fun and positive experience by bathing and grooming anxious dogs quickly and not leaving them kenneled all day to stress out. Now, pet owners with easily stressed dogs, you should not expect your dog to be at the groomer’s all day while you work. Drop him off and plan to pick him up within an hour, and don’t be late.

3. Stay for the Groom

Better yet, stay for your dog’s bath and groom. Some dog groomers don’t feel comfortable having you hover around while they’re grooming your dog, which is fine. It means they’re not the groomer for you. Many groomers say your dog will behave better when you’re not around, but I disagree. There’s nothing wrong with you waiting quietly in the waiting area or watching your dog’s groom from a window. Keep some distance, so your dog doesn’t whine excessively for you, but keep an eye on your dog the entire time.

4. Watch Your Dog’s Behavior Afterwards

This is a huge tell-tale on how your dog was handled during the grooming process. If your usually happy dog is scared, stressed or shy after grooming, then you shouldn’t go back to that dog groomer. If your dog has nicks, cuts, razor burns (red and inflamed skin from clipper blades that were too hot), brush burns (skin scrapes caused by brushing a dog too hard), I would advise you to never return to that groomer again. I would certainly give this groomer a call and tell him or her what happened, and you’re not very happy about it.

With That Said, Good Groomers Need Your Help

Trust me, I’m not bashing dog groomers; it’s a difficult and physically exhausting job. But as pet owners, a good groomer needs your help to keep grooming sessions positive. If your dog hates having his nails trimmed, then you should teach your dog that nail trims are rewarding at home. Brush your dog thoroughly every day. If your dog dislikes brushing or body handling, then start teaching him brushing is a good thing and body handling means lots of yummy treats.

Good luck, and don’t forget to sing the praises of an excellent dog groomer!

Filed Under: Clients, Grooming, Training Tagged With: best dog groomers, best pet groomers, choosing a dog groomer, dog training, Dog Training Tips, finding a dog groomer, finding a pet groomer, how to teach a dog, how to train a dog, pet groomer, scared dog grooming, teach a dog, train a dog, where to find dog groomers

Help! My Dog Steals Food Off The Table

March 9, 2016 by Fanna Easter

Proven Tips to Keep Your Dog From Stealing Food

Dog Stealing Food
monkeybusinessimages/iStock

As a child, I remember watching our small dog strategically jump from chair to chair until she landed on our dining room table. There, she promptly helped herself to a banana from the fruit bowl. My first thought was she’s pretty darn smart! Then, I was shocked she ate the entire banana.

While most pet owners appreciate their dogs’ skill and finesse when stealing food from the table, it’s not always entertaining watching your Rottweiler eat your carefully prepared roast. 🙂 These dog training tips not only stop dog stealing food behavior, but they also prevent it from happening in the first place.

Why Dogs Steal Food Off Tables

Who can resist deliciously smelling food sitting on a table, right? When food is left on tables or kitchen countertops, it can easily become an open invitation for your dog. Once your dog rewards himself by pulling down a loaf of bread and eating every slice, including the plastic wrapping, he learns to patrol tables and countertops heavily.

Every time your dog steals food, he is rewarded, which strengthens the behavior. As a result, the dog stealing food behavior happens more often. Think about it this way: If you found a $100 bill under a large tree in your backyard every week, I’m pretty sure you would keep an eye on it constantly or, if not, live under the tree.

RELATED: Can Dogs Eat Mushrooms?

How to Prevent Dog Stealing Food Behavior

As you’ve probably guessed, keeping food off tables and counters prevents this dog behavior from happening in the first place. Get the children involved and stash bread, snacks and fruits in closed cabinets or refrigerator. Remember to pick up food items after cooking.

If you’re cooking, and food is scattered across your counters, keep an eye on your dog. Or better yet, push food items further back from counter edges to prevent your dog from sniffing or snatching food. If your dog starts sniffing counter edges, call your dog to you and ask him to “lie down” and reward with a treat. Soon, your dog learns that lying down in the kitchen makes food appear rather than stealing it.

For proven food thieves, or dogs that have a history of stealing food off tables, fence the kitchen off with a baby gate. By creating a barrier, your dog is unable to patrol the area and look for food. Also, keep your dog in a crate when you’re away. This prevents your dog from learning to climb furniture for fruit bowls placed in high locations.

[perfectpullquote align=”full” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]If you punish your dog for stealing food, he will learn to steal food when you’re not around. [/perfectpullquote]

Don’t Punish Your Dog For Stealing Food

We all scream when a dog steals food and runs away with it; we’re shocked it just happened. Do know that punishing your dog for stealing food won’t stop him, but instead make it much worse. So many times, pet owners are advised to set up their dogs with tempting food dangling from the table edge. The moment their dogs walk toward it, they’re advised to punish him. Let me explain how this creates a super sneaky food thief.

If you punish your dog for stealing food, he will learn to steal food when you’re not around. Yes, punishment creates stealth thieves, meaning you never hear it happening or it happens so fast that everyone in the house is clueless. Think about it this way: If you’re speeding near a specific bridge and the police stops and issues you a ticket at that location, you’ll either learn to drive slowly everywhere or slow down when approaching the bridge.

Preventing a behavior from happening is key! If dog stealing food behavior occurs down the road, prevention still works best, so the behavior is never rewarded (dog is unsuccessful at stealing food because it’s not available). This works!

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE: Get Your Dog to Take Treats Gently

Filed Under: Behavior, Dogs, Training Tagged With: dog eats food from counters, dog steals food, dog steals food from counter, dog takes food from table, dog training, Dog Training Tips, how to teach a dog, how to train a dog, teach a dog, train a dog

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • …
  • 60
  • Next Page »

About

Dog Training Nation is a community of dog trainers, dog owners and dog lovers. Our mission is to provide trainers and owners valuable information to enrich dogs' lives. We cover a range of topics, from socializing puppies to dealing with aggressive dog behavior to selecting the best dog products. It is our hope you share our content to make the dog and owner world a better place.

​

Facebook

Video

Dog Training Nation is a dog training blog for pet owners and dog lovers. We cover a range of topics from puppy socialization tips to dog aggression to dog health. It is our hope you share our content to make the world a better place for dogs.

Dog Training Nation

Quick Links

Dog Training
Dog Behavior
Dog Training Videos
Become a Dog Trainer
About
Contact Us

Copyright © 2026 · Lifestyle Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in