Tuesday, April 19, 2011

The Right Way To Communicate with Your Puppy Dog

By Wendon Lee


Who doesn't remember this classic, cliched scene from movies and TV shows about "Lassie" or some other remarkably nicely spoken dog. The hero canine runs to her owner and starts barking excitedly, along with the owner responds some thing like, "What's that yoU say, Lassie. Pa is stuck in a tree. And there's a bear attempting to climb up. Plus the river is rising. Fast, girl, take me to him!" Okay, we all know how silly that is. No human could possibly realize a dog saying all that. But it is also silly simply because no dog could convey all that within the first place.

New puppy owners, especially ones who in no way owned a puppy before, typically feel the baby who sleeps in a basket can realize entire sentences as effortlessly as the other baby who lives in a crib. And it's just not so. When you believe your puppy can truly recognize you at the same time as TV's Lassie, you're seeing what you would like to see and not what is truly going on within your puppy's head.

So does that mean you shouldn't talk to your puppy. Of course not. He might not pick up on your just about every word, but he will recognize your music. A soothing tone to your voice will sooth him, just as it soothes a baby who has yet to fully grasp the human language that your puppy never will. When your puppy does something you need to encourage, like pooping within the ideal time and place, the excited sing-song praise you deliver having a large smile ("Who's a superb dog!") has an unmistakable meaning. A stern, short, but not angry expression of disapproval or warning will also be understood by your puppy, who does want to please you if you are raising him right.

As your puppy matures, he will begin to realize individual words. Use them from the beginning and ultimately your puppy will related those sounds with certain expected behaviors. But keep it to no more than a word or two. Sit. Come. Down. Over time, you may add to your puppy's vocabulary. Several dogs can ultimately learned hundreds of words. Some can grasph as a lot of as a thousand.

That is still not the exact same factor as genuinely understanding language, but words can grow to be component of how you bond together with your dog when you start employing them when he is a puppy and always follow them up having a treat if he does what you would like him to do. And by that point, you'll think he deserves it.




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