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How to CALM a HYPER Puppy OR Excite a Lazy Dog Using FOOD

March 7, 2021 By Duke Ferguson 2 Comments

Watch This Video and Learn How to CALM a HYPER Puppy OR Excite a Lazy Dog Using FOOD

 

If you enjoyed this video, please Subscribe to our YouTube channel (P.S. Click the bell icon to get notifications when we post a new video).

Do you have a pushy dog, a hyper puppy, or a dog that likes to jump all over you?  Does your dog lack focus, not listen or pay attention?  If so, then this video is for you!

Two Powerful Ways to Use Food in Training

Learn How to CALM a HYPER Puppy using food.  In this video, I’m going to teach you how to take the hyper, pushy dog and get him to calm down and start using his brain. And I’m going to do that with food and the least amount of punishment possible.   You’re going to see me doing not much at all, I’ll be sitting while training and I’m going to use food as a distraction.  So, not only am I going to be getting this hyper dog to start thinking and to start doing alternate behaviors to get what he wants, but I’m going to be distracting the dog with food at the same time.  You’ll learn the whole process of how you can use food to actually calm a dog down!  I’ll also so you how you can use food to get a dog more jacked up and excited.

The main purpose of this video is to show you there are multiple uses of food.  I think you’re really going to enjoy it; especially if you have a hyper puppy or even a lazy dog.

This post may contain affiliate links.

Jumpy, Hyper Puppy – Before Our Training Session

jumpy hyper puppy

SUMMARY

How to CALM a HYPER Puppy Using Food OR Excite a Lazy Dog Using Food.

  • A lot of  people, including dog trainers say “I don’t use food in training because it makes the dog too crazy.”  This is a common misconception.  When food is used properly you can actually calm a dog down and even create a thinking dog.
  • The weak dog with a low drive must become pushier to eat and the high drive, the pushy dog must calm down to eat.  Nature teaches us this.  Puppies learn quickly that in order to eat, they must have become pushy enough to get a spot to nurse amongst the littermates. If it’s too aggressive and bites mom’s nipples, she’s going to correct that behaviour.  If a puppy is weak and unmotivated there will be no food.
  • How do you calm a dog down using food?  Make him think!
  • The dog must learn: Ignore the reward to get the reward.  What I look for is behaviour; the dog must ignore the food in my hand and look into my eyes to get the food.  Offer predictable “room service” and feed the dog for the desired behaviour of sitting and being calm.  This is referred to as a direct reward.
  • Why are dogs pushy and jumpy? It’s because you reinforce it by making a game of it by pushing them down.
  • It’s better to train a dog that is thinking not just reacting.
  • This training is not a quick fix method but it will develop a solid, strong behaviour while still maintaining a good, solid, happy dog.

Attention and Focus After 6 Minutes of Training

Calm dog paying attention

 

The Liver Bites I use and train with every day.  Freeze-dried, all-natural liver bites with no preservatives.

treats to train the hyper puppy

 

Treat pouch to train the hyper puppy
Unleashed Potential K9 Training Pouch

 

Would you like FREE  puppy training or dog training advice? OR to just learn more about Duke’s philosophy on dog training?  GET ACCESS HERE to his exclusive, FREE mini-video series.  This mini-series is not found on YouTube… Get Access Now… You will love it!

Contact us HERE

FOLLOW US!

 

 


Full Transcript-

How to CALM a HYPER Puppy Using Food OR Excite a Lazy Dog Using FOOD

[The following is the full transcript of this YouTube video. Please note that this video, features Duke speaking extemporaneously–he is unscripted and unedited. Filmed in one take].

Hey everybody, it’s Duke Ferguson, owner, CEO, and master trainer of Unleashed potential K9 and creator of Dog Training Genesis. If you have a pushy dog, a hyper dog, a dog that likes to jump all over you and steal things and not focus and not pay attention and not listen – just outright crazy. Then this video is for you! In this video, I’m going to teach you how to take that type of dog and get them to start thinking using the brain. And I’m gonna use that with food and the least amount of punishment possible. And while you watch, you’re going to see me doing not very much at all, talking to the camera and the food I’m going to use as a distraction. So not only am I going to be getting this hyper dog to start thinking and to start doing alternate behaviours, to get what they want, but I’m going to be distracting the dog with food at the same time. And I’m going to explain to you the whole process of how you can use food to actually calm a dog down. And I’ll actually explain how you can use food to get a dog more jacked up and excited. The main purpose of this video is just to show you there are multiple uses of food. And I think you’re really going to enjoy it, especially if you have one of those dogs. Alright, see in the video.

So a lot of trainers, and a lot of people, not just trainers and people may say, “I don’t use food because it makes them too crazy”. Right. And you must understand, actually, can you come over here? And we’re going to flip around for a sec for the board.

Using food. Okay. Do you have a high dog? Not a pot high but a strong pushy food-drive And this is the balanced line that you want of a medium, like level-headed or even a weak dog, right? Uh, just kind of like a low, weak, uh, this weak dog must become pushier to eat. The high crazy nutbar needs to calm down and use their brain to eat. This isn’t “bro” science. This is mother nature. If this dog comes rambunctiously in there at the little puppy age, bites mommy’s nipples. She’s going to tell him, hey, you’re not eating today. If the little one is too weak, doesn’t get in there. Maybe there’s how many nipples and how many puppies you don’t eat today ’cause you weren’t pushy enough. Does it make sense? And food works for this and works for this but some people are like, no, it makes them too hectic this dog wants food, right?

It’s begging for food. And people say, Oh, never reward begging behaviour. bull, I say reward begging don’t reward this. So what I need to do, I can do lots of stuff. Most people are going to ask, how do you correct that? How do you punish it? And you could, you can do kinds of things. It’s a nine-month-old dog, so you can do that it’s not a puppy actually. So, you see, we teach certain things. So I’m going to just try something, for example, bring him some food, right. And I’ll amp the dog up. It’s not hard. That’s what the dogs learn. But that’s a drive, and a lot of people say, how do I friggin calm him down? Right. Okay. Make him think. So he’s already kind of had a little process of thinking just with my free videos. So if I sit here and I have the food. I can make him calmer by making him think, okay. Now I can either let him do this and be pushy, pushy, pushy, pushy, pushy. Right? And he learns being pushy I’ll starve to death. So he thinks, how do I get the food, but I’m not going to let him starve to death in a sense, but he will if he’s not paying attention, this is not paying attention. This is going by all the reinforcement that he’s had. And he’s learned to do this, to get what he wants. Now, the other thing I can do is I can do what’s called negative punishment. What’s an evil thing, right? Which I just don’t pull away. Bring it back.

I can make him calmer by making him think

Until he’s calmer. If he paws at the hand, I pull it away. And I come back. What I do look for is behaviour. I want you to look into my eyes, look at him, he so focused on food, how am I going to look in my eyes? Right? This might take a while, but this dog, he’s never had any training ever in a sense. High food drive builds up. Maybe he sits there and calms down. Maybe I don’t get him so that he’s calmer. Did you see that? Break! See he looked into my eyes. I don’t have to do anything. Lazy dog training, positive training is lazy dog training. He lays down, “Break”. Get him to think, how do I get the food? Do I jump to get the food? No, I won’t go hungry by being pushy, pushy to get the food. No! So when he does that, look, he’s already learning

I’m not doing anything. I’m talking to the camera. I don’t have to punish him. If he jumped on me, I could stand up and say, don’t touch me.  So let’s do something a little deeper. This is deeper practice. Now his freaking brain is working. I’m not luring nobody needs to do that cheerleading crap. He’s all over me and I say “hey” That’s a little bit better. Nice and calm. There’s your food. There it is there. What are you going to do to get it? He’s already starting to lay down. I want him to look into my eyes. So he’s exploring options. Why are they pushy? Why are they jumpy? Because you reinforce it by pushing them down and playing games. I’m going to reward this since he’s calm. “Break” He’s calm, you see that part? his mind was thinking. I’ll up the criteria later. So you still got that emotion so that every other day that goes by. “break” Dog uses his brain and gets smart. Do nothing.

Why are they pushy? Why are they jumpy? Because you reinforce it by pushing them down and playing games.

So just sit there and do nothing. Sometimes, you get the patience to do it. I want eye contact. I don’t care if he sits or down, I want eye contact. I’m going to get them all amped up again. Right? Just to see it. See how people could be. It gets worse. If he stays crazy long-term this is what he’s used to doing. Give me that, give me that, and he gets what he wants for the most part he’s right in there. Right? Pushing. And like I said, pulling away is negative punishment. Butt on the ground gives food. Paws – pulls things away. When you go for it, you push it away. When your ass is on the ground, it comes to you. It’s just a hot coal game. Okay? So I am doing a little bit of activity saying break and releasing him. And that actually keeps them active and high sometimes. If I want him super calm, if I want him just to sit there and be calm, I will give room service, which is a direct reward. Alright?

We’ll get him to do a sit or down and then I’ll show you what I mean by direct reward. This is predictable. It will be predictable. Every time I use it to get to that safe, predictable reward will calm him down because he knows. I’m not creating a break in the activity. I want to happy high drive dog. I want a dog thinking, look he’s not jumping on me anymore. I want to throw it and have him come back for it. I just liked the activity with the dogs.

So feed, feed. “Good” means stay in behaviour. You don’t have to use that word. A lot of people are like, Oh, you’re just baiting the dog. I just want to be calm. So just pause for now. As I talk to you, let’s be calm. I’d rather that than getting raked (clawed), know good Lord. See how he’s coming around and I’ve got the food right there and he’s not even jumping for it anymore. And he’ll forget. I don’t care if he moves, I didn’t tell him to lay down. I didn’t tell him to sit. I want him to calm down and I have food. I have high-value food. Watch, I’m going to actually.  I’m going to get him going because I want him to learn every time I get crazy

I’m not asking for obedience. I’m asking to use his brain, that’s it. Negative punishment. Right there folks. if you think punishment is bad, oh, poor boy.  I don’t ask for obedience. I’m asking for him to use his brain. He’s not jumping on me anymore. Isn’t that funny? Here’s food. Here and here, and this side and this side. It’s crazy.

I’m not asking for obedience. I’m asking him to use his brain, that’s it.

Notice the pushiness is less and the wheels are turning, “Good” Predictable, direct room service calms him down. Now I’m going to do some active training. Okay, to tire him out. I’m not going to step on the leash. Now, does that make sense? Jumping on it comes back to me. Now I can start training a recall if I want to. He’s now, sees, me I like to train a dog that’s actually thinking, not just reacting. I’ll react to the dog. He thinks he’s the one in control. He’s not. “Break” And that’s the release that will keep him a little stimulated, that keeps them happy. That builds dopamine and builds a love for the behaviour. So if you want a calm dog – room service – predictable, for now. You don’t do this constantly forever. He’s going to learn to be calm. You might have to give high rates of reinforcement or else if you are too slow he will mess up like that.

Me, I like to train a dog that’s actually thinking, not just reacting. I’ll react to the dog. He thinks he’s the one in control. He’s not.

High rates, high rates, then – slow it down. Instead of every second, every two seconds, then every three seconds and every four seconds. See that? Pulling away for Sarah but the only way you eat today or tomorrow. Get his attention. He’s crazy, I love it! Just make sense. The leash is only there so he can’t get away. I just made my fish tank smaller. See this harness? Throw the thing away! That’s why he pulls like crazy on the leash. When he hit the end of the leash there with something on the neck it will give him a little bonk and gets him back to me and smartens him up to pay attention. Now I can start training him to think do whatever I want. I’m actually not training him in any obedience, I’m not giving any commands, I’m just saying use your brain. “Break” He looks in my eyes. There’s food here. If he goes after it, he doesn’t eat, he sits and thinks he looks at my eyes. Here’s the thing. Ignore reward, think about something. Do, to get the reward. Ignore reward in order to get the reward. I don’t lure a lot, you know, I lure a little bit when I need to but it’s not needed. Simple.

Ignore reward in order to get the reward.  That’s how you calm a hyper puppy using food.

Okay. I hope you enjoyed this video as much as I enjoyed making it for you. And I hope you can take something that’s relevant out of there, a nugget or two, just replay the video if you want to and start applying that to your dog right away, you will see the dog start to think and the dogs start to respond. Provided you’ve got, I’m going to give you some three extra tips here provided you have three keys that are really important and your training, your timing’s gotta be good. You gotta be very consistent in a lifestyle with this, how you live with your dog trains your dog and the dog needs to be motivated to care. It needs to be motivated by what you have. Okay. Now you don’t have to distract your dog as I did in the video. I just want to show you an example.

 

This video is not a quick fix method. Okay. But I do find that it is rooted really deep in getting a really solid, strong behaviour and still maintaining a good, solid, happy, positive attitude with your dog. And it’s less risky. Okay. There are other methods that I can apply and show you. And I will do it in other videos of how you might be able to do this a little bit quicker, but this one, this one’s hard to screw up and it’s really tough to cause problems in your training if you will. All right. So thank you for watching. And if you’re looking for a trainer to help you with your dog an Unleashed Potential trainer or trainer you can trust, just check out our website unleashedpotential.ca I have trainers in Canada, in the United States. And we would love to help you. If there’s no trainer, Unleashed Potential trainer in your area.

 

I also have an online dog training program that start to finish it’s for puppies it’s for any type of dog, with really any kind of issues, because all of the recipe of what I teach the methodologies, the foundation is the most important thing that you need to know to get success. Everything else, once you get your dog thinking a certain way in a certain state of mind, everything else is super easy. So for your convenience, what I’m going to do is I’m going to put all of the links below in the description box. So you just check out the description box, check out a link that you want to go to. And it’s all there for your convenience to get more help if you need more help and you want to go further. If you haven’t subscribed to our channel, yet, we’re going to be putting out more and more. It was this year and I don’t want you to miss out. It’s going to be a lot of teaching, a lot of education this year, more than ever before. And what I would urge you to do now is click on your notifications and subscribe to our channel. Give us a thumbs up. And if you know anybody who has a pushy dog or a dog that they need help with, feel free to share this video. As always, thanks for watching. And I’ll see you in the next video.

Filed Under: Duke Ferguson, UPK9 Main Blog

Bear and Gunner Together Successfully! UPK9 Dog Training Success Story!

June 14, 2019 By Duke Ferguson 2 Comments

Bear and Gunner

Bear and Gunner trained with Unleashed Potential K9 because they would fight with each other in the same home, with no known trigger. Their owners were living a stressed out life with a baby on the way, managing two dogs that they were too afraid to have out together. Once we determined that their trigger was resources, we were able to start rehabbing their relationship. Apart from that, Gunner used to act extremely fearful when people would come to the house, refusing to socialize. After 4 private lessons and 3 weeks of Boarding and Training, here is what their owner, Jasmine, had to say.

“Major breakthrough, have to share.

We have people over for a regular poker night. Normally Bear would be downstairs with the guys and Gunner would be in the bedroom before anyone even showed up because he would lose it and bark out of major fear. That’s where he’d spend the night. I’d tried to bring him downstairs before but there was too many people, he’d bark and run away.

Tonight…..

I left Bear in the kennel and put Gunner on Place. Our first friend arrived and Gunner didn’t bark, he was happy. Eventually we broke him and he smelled our friend and didn’t seem too bothered. People arrived one by one which worked great, it gave Gunner time to see them and they all knew better than to try to approach him because that was the closest they’d ever gotten to him!

To make a long story short (sorry but I’m flabbergasted)… he didn’t bark once at anyone and didn’t run away. He even wagged his tail when a few people petted him carefully and gave him treats.

We got Bear out and placed them both. I went even a step further and brought him down to the poker room and this is where I was mind blown…He came in and walked around the table wagging his tail! Being normal. First time he ever went in the basement during a poker night, and he was comfortable and not sketched out. Some of these guys had never even seen Gunner because he was always hiding, and Bear did amazing too! He let Gunner do his thing and didn’t bother him, he was calm and obedient and respectful. Bear is getting some bed time with the guys and I’m with gunner upstairs on bed so they can each relax. ”

Ahhhhhh success!

 

Are you at your wits end with your dog’s behavior and would like to have control, sanity, and above all else, safety? No matter the age or breed, please contact me now,  I assure you, I can help!

Book your FREE consultation and demonstration today!
Send an email to camellias@upk9.ca  Like us on Facebook
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Not in my area? Find a trainer near you! 

For more information on how you can  purchase Duke’s Dog Training Genesis and become a member  CLICK  HERE 

Filed Under: Camellia Saunderson, Testimonials

Overly Excited, Pushy Dog? How to Calm Your Dog Down in Minutes

April 29, 2019 By Duke Ferguson Leave a Comment

1 Simple Trick to Calm the Overly Excited Dog and Get Attention Fast

Some dog trainers and dog owners believe that using food in dog training causes overexcitement, over-arousal, and creates a dog that is too pushy so they stop using the food or never begin with it.  They don’t believe an overly excited, pushy dog can learn to calm and pay attention with food alone.

This is a false belief.

In this video, I’ll show you how easy it can be to get a pushy dog, who really wants the food that I have, to calm down, pay attention by giving me eye contact and think, in order to get the food.

It’s so easy it could be considered lazy dog training!

If you enjoyed this video, please Subscribe to our YouTube channel (P.S. Click the bell icon to get notifications when we post a new video)

SUMMARY

  • The overly excited pushy dogs need to learn to calm down to eat and the weak dog needs to become pushier to eat.
  • Trainers and pet owners sometimes believe that food will make a dog too pushy and too jumpy.
  • People say, stand still and the dog will stop jumping. They will eventually but why not use food and create a thinking dog?
  • When a dog starts thinking, when they actually start using their brain, they stop the jumping and other unwanted behaviours.

dog not paying attention

  • Pay attention and look in my eyes to get the food reward.

Calm dog paying attention

  • Think of this:  if the dog charges at the bush (being overly excited), there will be no rabbits (food) in that bush.  When the dog figures out that if she looks into my eyes (calms down, and pays attention) it will make rabbits (food!) come from the bush and she eats.

 

The Liver Bites I use and train with every day.  Freeze-dried, all-natural liver bites with no preservatives.

Liver Bites - Dog Treats

 

 

treat pouch to hold high value food to calm the pushy dog
Unleashed Potential Training Pouch

Would you like FREE  puppy training or dog training advice? OR to just learn more about Duke’s philosophy on dog training?  GET ACCESS HERE to his exclusive, FREE mini-video series.  This mini-series is not found on YouTube… Get Access Now… You will love it!

Contact us HERE

 

Want to book a workshop with Duke Ferguson? CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION

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Full Transcript-

Overly Excited Dog? How to Calm Your Dog Down and Get Attention in Minutes

[The following is the full transcript of this YouTube video. Please note that this video, features Duke speaking extemporaneously–he is unscripted and unedited. Filmed in one take].

 

Hey there, it’s Duke Ferguson, the owner CEO and master trainer of Unleashed Potential K9 and creator of Dog Training Genesis.

In this video, I want to address the myth that too many trainers and too many pet owners tell me about and that is food making dogs too amped, too pushy, too crazy and they can’t train them because they’re too hungry. That’s further from the truth. So in this video, I want to show you an actual example of how you can get a dog to use his brain, and to calm down and think, in order to get the food while you don’t have to do anything. The dog is the one that’s actually putting out, trying, and you’re barely doing anything at all. It’s just that easy. Here’s a clip from my Monroe, Washington seminar and it shows exactly that. I hope you enjoy it! Before you start the video, be sure to subscribe to see future videos, just like this one.

I want to address the myth that too many trainers and too many pet owners tell me about and that is food making dogs too amped, too pushy, too crazy and they can’t train them because they’re too hungry. That’s further from the truth.

So the pushy dog, remember I said, I’ll get her all amped. The pushy dog needs to learn to calm down to eat,  and the weak dog needs to put out to eat. So, let her push. I’m looking for anything.  Notice the pushiness just kinda stopped. I don’t care what she does I’ll either go…If I’m looking for eye contact she jumps on this board, I’ll mark that. I’m just getting her brain to work. I’m talking to you guys. This is a dog doing reactive stuff,  just what they know, what they can get away with. And she’ll learn to start using her brain and she’ll look into my eyes. I can sit on a chair. Do you want to see the look on her face? Just hang tight.

The overly excited, pushy dog needs to learn to calm down to eat,  and the weak dog needs to put out to eat.

The dog’s a bit nervous. When they are really hungry, touch. okay. We will go this way to see. There’s the food, I want eye contact. When a dog starts thinking, when actually start using their brain, they stop all this sh** and they think, huh, charging the bush… there are no rabbits in that bush. Ah,  See? Simple.

So in theory, people could say, stand still and the dog will stop jumping. They want you. They will eventually, but you’ll get all scratched to crap. If they want food, all they’re doing is licking and pushing on my hand. And I can discourage that pushiness, by taking it away. So, I can make it faster. So let’s say they’re really pushy when she goes to it, I pull away. You can play catch to build a little dopamine. So you can actually use your food as prey as well. Now I’m going to make it more distracting.  She learns, to get distracted by this you starve! Sit down and think, how do I get that? She doesn’t understand, right, so I make it easy. So notice I pull away. See the brain working?

So you can actually use your food as prey as well.

Put your camera right on her face, the look, she’s like. Come see it, just her head, this dog her brain, you can smell the wheels turning in there and there’s smoke coming out of her ears, every so often, it’s great! Okay. I can do this, all day, and she’ll learn to stare in my eyes. . So fast, “Chip” And it happens faster, faster, faster See it? See the eyes? She’s thinking. You want a thinking dog. No GPS help. I’m not doing this: Look, look, oh good girl! Don’t do that. Don’t do that. That drives me crazy. So now, you’re not paying her, and that’s okay? because she’s looking at you. Right, because she’s putting out and I can talk to you and she’s still thinking. Now I’m talking to you guys and look at the dog. She’s putting out. Yeah. So I don’t need to do the cheerleading and it’s less effort. That’s called lazy dog training. Look, here’s the pouch man, holy cow! Look at her thinking. “Chip” Look in the guy’s eyes, make rabbits come from the bush and eat it. She learns. Hey, pretty quick. That’s an easy thing I know what to do. I’m already waving around.  Notice how people are like “Don’t distract the dog.” “Don’t distract, In training, don’t distract my dog.”

I’m talking to you guys and look at the dog; she’s putting out.  So I don’t need to do the cheerleading and it’s less effort

 

 

Filed Under: Duke Ferguson, UPK9 Main Blog

Join Duke Ferguson in Monroe, Washington March 22nd, 23rd and 24th, 2019! Art of Attention / NePoPO® Workshop!

February 23, 2019 By Duke Ferguson Leave a Comment


Duke Ferguson Owner / CEO of Unleashed Potential K9 Academy® and Creator of Dog Training Genesis is coming to Sparks K9 training centre in Monroe, WA USA!!  March 22nd, 23rd, and 24th 2019.
Come and learn from one of the best in the world!

Hosted by John Sparks of Sparks K9 Services!! Join Duke Ferguson for a 3-day dog training workshop located at Sparks K9 Services Training Centre in Monroe, WA & learn how to get the very best out of your dog.

 

I am super pumped to work with you! I have spent the past 31 years studying dog training methods and applications from some of the best dog trainers and schools around the world and continue to do so. Incase you did not know, I am also a  Dog Business Consultant, Mentor, Teacher & Coach to many great professional dog trainers around the world and I want to share with you the secrets to my training success.

You can see My bio HERE

Come and learn a modern day, real world, balanced approach that is based on science, mother nature and creativity. Learn to get your dog to respond to you with heart and soul, learn the NePoPo® way!

Imagine what it would be like to have your dog learn to love paying attention and responding to you no matter what, no matter where. What would that be like for you?

Who can attend this workshop?   Professional companion dog trainers & service dog trainers, rescue groups, volunteers & fosters, dog walkers, boarding and training daycare workers, k9 handlers & dog sport enthusiasts who want to better their knowledge and skills and have the dogs perform at a higher level. I also welcome companion pet owners who are in need of help fixing undesired behaviours and who want to decrease stress, and liability in their life.

There are no special audit spots or working spots so everyone is welcome to bring their dog as this will be a hands on workshop. If you choose not to bring a dog that is fine, you will still have a chance to do some hands on….even if you’re training a human 😉

All breeds and behaviour issues are welcome….including aggression. (muzzles are required for any reactive or aggressive dogs).

“Preparation Homework”  IMPORTANT NOTE!!
ALL DOGS MUST BE HUNGRY, MOTIVATED AND WILLING TO WORK!
All who are attending should watch this 6 video mini series to prepare for this event at the link below.

Free Mini Video Series Sign up.

 Remember to bring regular meals and rewards of high value like treats and a favourite toy.

The workshop may be called  “The Art of Attention” and the group focus exercise on day two is just one fun helpful thing we do to get serious attention and control when needed for safety and sanity reasons…BUT…it’s not just about having the dog look at you.   This workshop is so much more than that.
  • It’s teaching you a complete system that creates harmony, clear communication, ignition, hope and a love for all behaviours the dog is to perform for you.
  • It’s about you learning to successfully condition the dog to willingly and eagerly pay attention to you and what you want the dog to do while giving you heart and soul.
  • It’s about learning to condition automatic responses and having the dog think and make wise choices.
  • It’s teaching you a powerful system that enables you to get the most from your dog with the least amount of effort. This system is the reason I named a series of  You Tube videos on Unleashed Potential K9 TV “The Lazy Dog Trainer”.
  • It’s about teaching you how to build an amazing relationship between you and your dog.
  • It’s about having life changing experiences, ah-ha moments, taking the system home and implementing it in daily life.

What will you be Learning at the Art of Attention Workshop? 

  • Understand why dogs do what they do, how they do it and what we need to do about it to help the dog find its advantage.
  • Learn the NePoPo® recipe and tools used.
  • Understand clear communication and establishing it with the dog.
  • 3 keys of training and shaping behaviours.
  • Pros & cons of positive training.  Pros and cons of using pressure, corrections and punishment.
  • Charging marks, free shaping vs luring and hands-on training exercises with people and then dogs.
  • E-collar conditioning and working hands on with people then dogs.
  • Understanding behaviours as well as how to shape and modify them.
  • One-on-one work with your dog and me.
  • Group work adding distractions.

I fully understand that all people & dogs who are attending will have different levels of experience, different behaviour issues and different goals. I will be sure to work at everyone’s individual level and adjust the training recipe according to each persons and dogs needs.

In past workshops I have trained everything from deaf dogs, blind dogs, children and dogs, older dogs, puppies, people in wheelchairs and those who have other disabilities.

On social media? your welcome to check out the Facebook Event Page Here

If you want to book one-on-one coaching while I’m in the area then email me personally to set up a time.  duke@upk9.ca

NOTE: Private, one-on-one training/coaching spots are not part of the event and very limited so they will go very fast!

Know anyone else who would benefit from this event? Please SHARE this and help me reach those people and dogs who are in need of improving their situation in life.

 If you want more reliability, safety, freedom, joy and peace of mind for you, your dog or your clients then this workshop is a must for you. Do not pass up this opportunity! This is your chance!!

Check out promo video in the link below:


Breakfast, lunch & snack will be provided. Also discounted rates are available for a hotel room. (INFO COMING SOON)

 

**REGISTER NOW AND SAVE – EARLY BIRD REGISTRATION**PLUS BE ENTERED IN TO WIN A UPK9 BRAND MINI EDUCATOR E-COLLAR ( Valued at $299) 
Save $50. Now! Register before Friday, March 15th, 2019 and get your spot for $550. After March 15th, the ticket price will be $600.

 

Filed Under: Duke Ferguson, UPK9 Main Blog

How Unleashed Potential K9 Can Help You!

January 22, 2018 By Guy Lapierre Leave a Comment

Train Your Dog for the Real World

UPK9 Clients Enjoying a Pack Walk

Our dog training programs at Unleashed Potential K9 are geared to help you overcome behaviour issues or raise a well balanced puppy. We have programs to fit most budgets and they are all structured to see you through to the end. As long as you stay committed to bettering your dog so will we. Our programs do not have set timelines or a set number of sessions. They are accessible to you for as long as you own your dog so that you may reach your goals and beyond.

Below is a video message from Guy Lapierre, the Unleashed Potential K9 trainer in Halifax, Nova Scotia, explaining the UPK9 program with footage of actual customers in training and their results from the program. Most of the dogs you will see in the footage were previously reactive or aggressive towards others.

Got Dog Problems? Do you want help? No matter the size, sex, age or breed We Can Help!

Would you like  FREE dog training advice? OR to just learn more about Duke’s philosophy on dog training?  GET ACCESS HERE to his Exclusive, FREE Mini video series  Click Here!! This mini series is not found on Youtube… Get Access Now… You will love the mini series and its Free!! 🙂

To find a UPK9 Trainer near you or to Book your  FREE Demonstration and Consult Click Here

For more information on how you can  purchase Dog Training Genesis and become a member  CLICK  HERE or on the photo below of Duke and his dogs.

ARE YOU A TRAINER LOOKING TO BETTER YOUR SKILLS OR SOMEONE WANTING TO LEARN TO BECOME A DOG TRAINER or JOIN THE UPK9 TEAM ? CLICK HERE TO LEARN HOW YOU CAN COME AND TRAIN WITH DUKE FERGUSON

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Learn More About Dog Training Genesis CLICK HERE !

Follow us on FACEBOOK  and subscribe to  us on YouTube

 

Filed Under: Group Class, Guy Lapierre, UPK9 Halifax, UPK9 Main Blog

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RSS The Weekly Recall with Duke Ferguson

  • #31 Repairing Trust When Communication Breaks Down
    What happens when communication falls apart and trust starts slipping away? In this episode of The Weekly Recall, Duke tackles one of the most common problems trainers and dog owners face. A breakdown in communication. The same thing that creates tension with dogs can also create conflict with clients, spouses, teams, and even ourselves. Duke […]

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Unleashed Potential - Stratford, PE, C1B 2W2, Canada
Phone: (902) 367-3647 · Toll Free: (844) 364-3647

Hours of Operation:
Unleashed Potential Main Office:
Monday - Friday: 9am-4pm | Office closed on Saturdays & Sundays
Dog Training & Coaching - By appointment only