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How to Make Dog Training Fun With the Sit & Stay Game





How compensating it is for your puppy to sit and stay tranquilly before you enable him to get some sustenance, or treat or a toy. Furthermore, for your canine, it is a magnificent affair to hold up until you to give the order. Since that is the manner by which your puppy needs to collaborate with you. You are responsible for his space and he will obey and remunerate you when you make preparing fun.

The Sit and Stay Game makes preparing your pooch to sit and remain a fun and remunerating knowledge for both of you.

Principles of the Game

Pick a high-remunerate sustenance and ensure that your pooch is eager and prepared to eat.

Settle on the "Order" word. Keep it reliable, something like "Sit (or Stay or Wait)" functions admirably.

Choose the "No Reward" marker word, something like "Nope (or Too Bad or Opps)" functions admirably.

Watch your pooch's dialect. The way a canine says "please" is to get into the "sit" position.

Be understanding. You pooch will sit to state "please" (in the end).

Sit and Stay Food Bowl Game

At the point when a canine needs nourishment, a toy, to play, or simply going out the entryway, he searches for a charge from the pack pioneer. So here's a splendid approach to prepare your pooch that is fun and fulfilling. In the meantime, you are giving your puppy the feeling that you are the pack pioneer:

Request that your pooch "Sit" while you hold the nourishment bowl distant from your puppy, around 2 feet away. Stand sideways with one shoulder confronting him. Hold the bowl on the inverse side.

Start to drop the bowl straight down to the floor. As you lower the bowl, if your puppy moves or gets up, essentially say exceptionally matter-of-factly "Nope" (your order word) AND in the meantime move the bowl away and distant. At that point request that your pooch sit once more. (You may need to venture out of position so you can confront your pooch sideways or set him back into position on the off chance that he has hurried forward). The key is to begin straight from a similar position once more.

At the point when your canine keeps up the SIT POSITION, begin bringing down the bowl to the floor- - while he is still in position. In the event that your canine begins to get up to go to the bowl, pull the bowl move down once more. The key is that you are bowing down with the bowl and pulling back with the bowl until you can put it on the floor while your pooch is HOLDING THE SIT POSITION.

Look at your pooch while he is in the sit position. You need your canine to remain in the sit position AND look, before you move the bowl to your puppy and offer it to him.

When you have put the bowl on the floor, say "Stay" (or your summon word), hold up a few moments, then move the bowl towards your pooch and enable him to eat. Try not to expect excessively from your pooch, yet. Only a few moments of HOLDING THE STAY POSITION "hold up" time is great at first.

At the point when your pooch has kept up the SIT and STAY for a few moments, then push the bowl toward your canine and enable him to eat his nourishment. Play the amusement maybe a couple times each day, at nourishing time, adding a few moments to the "Stay" time until your canine holds the SIT and STAY position and you give him the bowl. You are building up your puppy's conduct to sit and sit tight for your summon so as to get the reward.

Keep in mind both you and your puppy needs to comprehend the tenets: with a specific end goal to get nourishment your pooch must hold the Sit and Stay position and take a gander at you (not the sustenance) to win!

You can attempt this with a treat, a ball or toy as well. Keep it fun, chuckle at your pooch when he tries to cheat, and give your puppy laud when he takes care of business.

The Sit and Stay Game is not just about preparing your canine to sit and remain for nourishment. It's about the laud you give- - and the delight you get when your puppy amiably sits and remains for you. What it's truly about is winning a fun and compensating relationship for both you and your canine!

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