Dog Training Nation

How to Teach Your Dog Chin Rests

Chin Rests Make Grooming and Medicating Your Dog’s Face Easier

How to Teach Your Dog Chin Rests
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While chin rests are a fun trick to teach your dog, you can use this behavior for so many different things. If your dog is fearful of human contact, teaching your dog to rest her chin in your hand teaches her body handling and close human contact is a good thing.

When to Use Chin Rests

Anytime you need to examine, brush, bathe, trim or medicate your dog’s head or neck area, chin rests will make it much easier for both you and your dog. Also, an awesome side effect is it builds confidence while teaching dogs that body handing is fun and very rewarding.

Visiting the Veterinarian

Annual dog exams always consist of two things: ear and eye exams. These exams are a struggle for most dogs. When you think about it, it’s kind of weird having someone look into your eyes with a funny gadget and stick a hard plastic cone down your ear canal.

Teach your dog to calmly rest his head in your head, so the veterinarian can get a good look into those peepers and ears. No more wrestling and forcing your dog to the ground. You’ll be shocked how easy it is to teach too.

Applying Medication

Some time in your dog’s life,  he’ll need medication applied to his eyes and ears. Here’s where chin rests will make putting medication on his face much easier. It’s also a great way to clean your dog’s ears.

RELATED: Best Probiotic for Dogs

Grooming

Ninety-nine percent of dogs need to be brushed, but it seems most will duck their heads down as a brush moves toward their face. Instead of chasing your dog around the house with a brush, train your dog to rest his chin in your hand. Once he learns chin rests, slowly introduce a brush. Don’t touch him with it yet. Instead say “yes” and treat him when he sees the brush. Only then do you slowly move the brush closer, touch his head and brush once. If your dog backs away, you’ve gone too far too soon, so take a step back.

By teaching your dog to calmly rest his chin in a stranger’s hands, your groomer will most definitely find it useful. The dog groomer can quickly trim around your dogs’ eyes, muzzle and ears without holding his head still.

Building Confidence

Teaching your dog human hands and close body contact is fun and rewarding is empowering for dogs, especially fearful ones. If your dog ducks or moves away anytime you reach or move toward him, I highly recommend teaching chin rests.

How to Teach Your Dog Chin Rests

You’ll need lots of super yummy treats cut into pea-sized bites. I recommend using hot dogs and cheese, as they’re super yummy and your dog is willing to work hard to earn them. Another important factor: don’t stare into your dog’s eyes or face while teaching this behavior. It’s extremely freaky looking to dogs and humans alike. Rest your gaze on your open hand instead.

Step 1: Just Reach

Before reaching and grabbing your dog’s chin, we need to teach him to stand still while you reach for his face (don’t touch his face yet). Most dogs back away and, if you watch really closely, so do people. 🙂

WATCH: Teaching Your Dog Chin Rest Part 1

https://youtu.be/9e2P-UQRws4

Step 2: Touch Under Chin

As with anything, there are a couple of ways to teach your dog to allow touching of his face. You can shape and capture behavior or lure–it’s up to you, your skill level and dog’s personality. Here, I’ll teach you how to lure the behavior.

If your dog steps back while you feed or approach him, go back to step one and practice some more.

WATCH: Teaching Your Dog Chin Rest Part 2

https://youtu.be/petL_MI7MS8

Step 3: Rest Chin

Now, we’ll teach your dog to lower his chin in your hand.

WATCH: Teaching Your Dog Chin Rest Part 3

Step 4: Rest Longer

Now that your dog has learned to drop his chin into your open hand, we’ll teach him to hold it there longer and relax.

On average, a 10-second chin rest is sufficient. If your dog needs his head groomed, then one minute is plenty. After a quick break, hold your hand out for another chin rest and groom for another minute.

Step 5: Pass It On

When guests come over, ask if they can help you and your dog work on a few things before sitting down and chatting. Bring your dog into the room–on leash is easier, so your dog doesn’t jump on them. Practice all five steps with them and you’ll notice the training session moves much faster since your dog already knows the behavior.

Chin rests are super cool to show off to friends!

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