Thanks a lot William, for your detailed, descriptive and accurate reply. You
are a diamond ;-) 

Most of what you say makes a lot of sense to me. The idea that it could be
the sound of charging that trigs him is a very good idea. It is a lot easyer
to work at a problem when you know what is causing it. 
But there is one thing in your set of method that sounds a bit odd in my
ears. One thing that I have experienced a lot of times is to be very aware
of what you are doing when looking a dog (and most animals) directly into
their eyes. I have learned that a direct stare is a challenge in the dog's
natural language. I use this sometimes when he shows any kind of unwanted
aggression. After a brief moment he realises that I am the alfa, and looks
away. According to my logic the look at me procedure is similar to say
"challenge me". Sounds like "looking for trouble", if you see what I mean. 

Please elaborate a bit on this.


Tim
Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)
 
Never underestimate the power of stupidity in large crowds 
(Very freely after Arthur C. Clarke, or some other clever guy)

> -----Original Message-----
> From: William Robb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 7. februar 2006 05:27
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: PESO: Another Dawg Picture
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tim Øsleby"
> Subject: RE: PESO: Another Dawg Picture
> 
> 
> >
> >
> > Ok. Here my rant is over. Do you, or other fellow PDMLers, have any
> advice
> > here? Is there any method I can make him used to flash photographing.
> 
> He may not like the whine of the charging circuit, BTW.
> 
> Anyway, start with some simple calming techniques. I've found a very good
> one is to stroke the dog down his side, right from his cheek to his hip.
> They find it very calming, and so might you.
> You are mimicking what the bitch did to him after he's had a meal when he
> was still nursing.
> It's a very powerful bonding method.
> Anyway, once you have the dog in a calm state of mind (it helps if he
> tends
> to be calm anyway), put a command to this behaviour. I don't know what the
> Norwegian translation would be, but in English, I use the word "settle",
> as
> in "settle down" to indicate I want him to drop back into the trance that
> I
> put him into with stroking his side.
> His tendency when you are doing this will be to sit down.
> As he sits, tell him to sit, and praise him for doing it.
> Tell him "settle", and "good sit" and any other soft gentle verbal praise
> you can think of (use the language of your choice, it's the thought that
> counts), and stroke his side.
> After you've been playing this game a few times a day for a couple of
> weeks,
> you will find that your dog is a lot happier to do things for you, and you
> can start desensitizing him to the flash.
> 
> I'd use food as a motivator.
> Start by seeing if it is the light or the noise that bothers him.
> It won't change much, but it's good to know what triggers our dog's
> behaviour.
> Start by pointing the flash away from him, perhaps even put it into a sock
> to muffle the output, and sit down beside him.
> Stroke his side for a while, make sure he is calm, and have a helper
> trigger
> the flash some distance away from him, and pointing it away, especially if
> it is the light rather than the noise that is setting him off.
> If he reacts badly, tell him "no, Settle", and wait for him to calm back
> down. Don't say anything to him at all while he is acting out. After he is
> calm again, resume stroking his side and telling him he is a good dog.
> At some point, he will stop reacting badly to the flash.
> Once he stops reacting badly, but not before, reward him with food.
> Once you are using a food reward, start a new game as well.
> This is a fun game, and really easy for the dog. Less easy for the person.
> You really have to be attentive to your dog for this one. I find even
> having
> a radio turned on is too much of a distraction for me.
> Stand in one spot in your house, perhaps beside a table. The dog should be
> on leash.
> Have a bowl of treats on the table.
> All the dog has to do is sit in front of you and look you in the eye.
> He does that, you tell him how wonderful he is tickle his ears for a
> moment
> or two, and give him a treat.
> I suppose it is easiest to pop the treat into his mouth, and then tickle
> his
> ears.
> Once you have the dog in the habit of looking at you, put a command to it.
> Tell him to "watch me", then praise him for doing it.
> 
> Easy, watch the dog, and wait for him to look you in the eye. Treat him,
> praise him, tickle him, and wait for him to look you in the eye again.
> Repeat as needed, until his tendency is to look at you. Keep verbally
> encouraging this behaviour, even as you wean him off the treats.
> Dogs like to be acknowledged when they do what they are supposed to be
> doing..
> 
> Teach him to "stay" as well.
> 
> After the dog is sitting reliably, and you can stand beside him while he
> sits still, take a short leash in your right hand (I work the dog on the
> left side, alter your method to suit), drop your hand, palm towards the
> dog,
> in front of his nose and give the command "stay". Pivot in front of the
> dog
> so that you are "toe to toe" with him. Stand in front of him for a moment,
> then pivot back beside the dog.
> Count to two, then praise the dog for staying.
> Build up your time slowly until you can stand in front of him for a minute
> or so.
> Use your settle and watch me commands gently if required.
> If the dog starts to move, tell him "no" in a command voice. If he stops
> moving, pivot back beside him immediately, count to two, and praise him.
> If he moves, take a few steps backwards away from him and call him to you.
> Praise him gently for coming when called, take him back to where you were
> working the stays, and do it again, for not as long, and keep working on
> the
> time.
> Once you have a one minute stay, then take a step out, and pivot in front.
> Go back to very little time, and start building the time up again.
> Once you are at a minute, you can start to take two steps, drop back in
> duration, and work the time up again.
> Repeat this method until you have the dog sitting reliably for a few
> minutes
> with you right at the end of a six foot leash.
> 
> In a few weeks, you should have a dog that trusts you completely, will
> calm
> down more or less on command, will sit and stay for pictures while you
> walk
> back to the camera, and will look you in the eye while you are shooting.
> 
> http://pug.komkon.org/01nov/2Rotties.html
> 
> William Robb
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 




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