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 / Dogs / Dog Handling: Teaching Your Dog to Say “Ah”

Dog Handling: Teaching Your Dog to Say “Ah”

December 16, 2014 by Fanna Easter

Body Handling Exercises

Teaching Your Dog to Open His Mouth
Mouth exercises are important for good health and behavior. membio/Deposit Photos

Check your dog’s mouth and teeth a couple of times a week. You’re looking for plaque buildup or lodged foreign bodies. It’s important to teach dog body handling exercises early on so follow these quick tips on teaching your dog to say “ah”!

Using a clicker and yummy treats, remember to click and treat as you’re touching, lifting or opening. Practice for 1-2 minutes with breaks in between. Usually, steps 1-9 take 2 or 3 short sessions to teach. If at anytime, your dog refuses to open his mouth, go back to steps 1-5 for several training sessions.

  1. Using your index finger, touch the side of your dog’s muzzle. Keep clicker away from your dog’s ear. If that’s not possible, use a verbal marker “yes” instead.
  2. Lift the corner of your dog’s lip.
  3. Lift the other corner of his lip.
  4. Place your index finger in his mouth.
  5. Pull back his lips for a second.
  6. Place one hand across his muzzle (keeping your fingers away from his eyes and not applying any pressure).
  7. Place hand under his muzzle.
  8. Using both hands, open front of dog’s mouth. Click or say “yes” as you’re opening his mouth. Keep it short. Open, click, let go of mouth and treat.
  9. Open mouth for half a second.
  10. Extend duration (time) of mouth. Open slowly in small steps until your dog is comfortable for 2-3 seconds.
  11. Add a cue: Before moving your hands to open his mouth, say “Mouth.” Then, proceed to open and take a peek inside!

Mouth Work Means Less “Mouthing” for Puppies Too

Mouth work (touching and massaging gums and muscles of the mouth) works wonders for mouthing or nipping puppies too! Plus, give it a go for easily excited adolescent dogs (ranging between 6-18 months old). You’ll be shocked at the calming results.

How does it work? Using T Touch (Tellington Touch Training), you’re teaching body awareness using calming touch work, which promotes relaxation. Puppies and adolescent dogs have a tough time calming themselves so any opportunity to teach self soothing is highly beneficial.  

Points to remember:

  • Move slowly. Each tiny circle should take half a second to complete.
  • Use light pressure just enough to lightly move skin around. T Touch is different than massage. You’re not kneading muscles. You’re promoting relaxation and body awareness.
  • Teething puppies’ mouths are sore between 4-6 months. Instead try using T Touch around his neck and shoulders. Once all teeth have erupted, begin mouth work again.

Tellington TTouch Mouthwork for Dogs

Here’s a great video demonstrating T Touch for mouth work. Notice how slow and soft her hands move around the dog’s mouth?

Have you taught mouth work yet? If so, how did it go?

Filed Under: Dogs, Puppies, Training Tagged With: brushing dog's teeth, checking puppy teeth, dog body handling, dog will not allow vet to look in mouth, how do you look into a dog's mouth, how to brush dog's teeth, how to look in your dog's mouth, mouth work, puppy body handling, touch mouth work dogs

Comments

  1. NoSpam says

    July 20, 2015 at 12:47 pm

    Isn’t molding (physically manipulating dog’s body) one of the more inefficient/ineffective ways to attempt to teach a dog any skill? Wouldn’t it be more effective to teach by capturing & shaping? I was hoping to find creative methods to get the behavior started, capture it & then shape & reinforce it.

    • Fanna Easter says

      July 20, 2015 at 3:52 pm

      Absolutely! Shaping and capturing are fabulous when teaching behaviors, and I’ll admit, I lure too. Modeling means physically forcing dogs into a position, is really holds back the learning process. Sorry if this article gave you the impression of modeling mouth handling.

      For this article, I focused on teaching dogs positive associations for mouth handling (hands on mouth) while looking (examining) in their mouth. If a dog refuses to allow any touching of his mouth, we click “hand next to muzzle (not touching)”, and always work within a dog’s threshold (moving at the dog’s pace). I would never reach in and open a dog’s mouth without clicking and treating hands near mouth, touching, touching lips, pulling lips back, opening, etc. Mouth handling happens, especially at the vet’s office or if a dog has something stuff in his teeth. 🙂

      Now, you can totally teach “ah” by shaping or capturing open mouths, and then clicking for larger mouth openings, then add a cue such as “say ah”. If you want to touch or look in their open mouth, you’ll need to add that to the behavior too. Hope this answers your questions!

Trackbacks

  1. Small Dog Dental Care Tips | Dog Training Nation says:
    February 17, 2015 at 5:23 pm

    […] With such a small dog mouth, it’s hard to gauge pressure when brushing teeth. Bristles should touch teeth, but they should not flatten against teeth. Allow the bristles to do the work. When using wipes or swabs, gently move back your dog’s lips so you’re sure you’ve covered all tooth area. If your small or medium-sized dog is uncomfortable with mouth handling, check out this article. […]

  2. How to Brush Dog's Teeth | Dog Training Nation says:
    February 18, 2015 at 5:36 pm

    […] If your dog is uncomfortable with you touching his mouth, check out this article. […]

  3. Avoid Lip Fold Pyodermas With Weekly Cleanings says:
    March 16, 2016 at 5:10 pm

    […] away, pulls his head away from your hands or freaks out when you touch his mouth, check out this article on teaching your dog to say “ah.” It has tips on teaching your dog to enjoy mouth […]

  4. Dog Teeth Cleaning: 3 Tips That Don't Involve Brushing says:
    April 6, 2016 at 5:13 pm

    […] If your dog is not comfortable having his mouth touched, check out tips on teaching your dog to say “ah.” […]

  5. Teach Your Dog to Enjoy Body Handling | Dog Training Nation says:
    November 29, 2016 at 7:10 pm

    […] least amount of pressure possible. Never force the issue. Soon, and with lots of practice, you can teach your dog to say “ah,” easily hold your dog’s leg for blood withdrawals, stand still while the vet examines her and so […]

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

Go to mobile version