Posts from the ‘Emmett’ category

Emmett 5 stars, Me 2 1/2 stars

I video Emmett and me on occasion to correct (hopefully) my timing and to see where I’m being confusing and generally to audit myself as teacher. I am VERY fortunate that despite my mistakes, Emmett is doing well and learns quickly.

This morning’s entire session was just under 4 minutes. I edited out some of the beginning camera adjusting and some shots of my backside (I don’t go out in public like this!!! – my winter jacket is knee length) that you can be thankful, you didn’t see :)

This morning, we were going to go to class, but I got late and decided to regroup for a class tomorrow. We did some “wait” and “recall” train and play outside and then came in and I decided to use what would have been class time to video some things inside and see how I was doing. Gah. Well, the video is so helpful in seeing my issues.

Clicker training is a positive reinforcement/operant conditioning training that uses a click, followed by a treat to teach behaviors. As the behavior is learned, the clicking and treating is reduced and ultimately eliminated, unless training a new behavior. You can see in the video, that I do not click/treat the sit. Emmett has known sit since he was 7 weeks old so click-treat is not needed. I will however, click-treat if I ask for a sit in a highly distracting situation and I get the behavior.

I, as do so many, once thought “clicker training” was a gimmick. I have learned that not only is it not a gimmick, but there is scientific evidence to show that things happen in the brain with the click, a recurring marker sound or word and reinforcement with a valued resource. It works with animals AND people. Many athletes and athletic trainers use a form of clicker training to mark positions and help shape optimal positioning. If you are interested in how the brain works and how operant conditioning works, it is fascinating. Reaching the Animal Mind by Karen Pryor is a fun and excellent source of explanation.

Back to Emmett and me and our morning’s video. We started with some things we know and in the middle, I brought out a large ball. It is a workout ball that I use for stretching as well as a “bench” for strength training. I recently read about Treibball. Per Wikipedia:

Treibball is a positive-reinforcement, competitive dog sport which originated in Germany and entered sanctioned competition in 2008. The dog must gather and drive large exercise balls into a soccer goal.

Essentially, it is a way for dogs to “herd” when they don’t have animals to herd. I thought to try with Emmett. I’ve thought of trying agility as well as nose work, but when I saw Treiball, it appealed because I have a ball, we can do it inside or outside and it seemed fun. Plus, Emmett is an English Shepherd, i.e. a herding dog.

Some of the info I read noted that ball crazy dogs had a more difficult time than non ball crazy dogs. Emmett is not ball crazy. Tennis balls are meh. Sticks … YES!, his Wubba toy YES! Hence the big ball. I started letting him nose it and click-treating when he touched it. That’s mostly what you’ll see in the video. There is one time where I click twice and kind of shower the treats because he kept nosing the ball, i.e. moving it. Another time, I released him from a “Wait” to get the Wubba that I’d thrown, but he nosed the ball on the way … my mistake of confusing direction so I click treated the ball touch and we redid the “go get it”.

The foundation of positive reinforcement training is building trust and relationship. There is no punishment for “incorrect” behavior. Incorrect behavior is not rewarded. Inappropriate behavior is redirected and the redirected “good” behavior is rewarded. “Do this, not that” is the metaphor. A “no” is not clear instruction.

Has it all been “peaches and cream” … not at all, but it HAS been a much happier experience than any I’ve had training a puppy and I think I’ll eventually learn :)

Emmett is 10 months old!

A quick “Happy 10 months” to Mr. Emmett post and some Auggie news … (all is well, but a warning that there are some graphic images!!)

AND, if you follow my Instagram stories … repeats, but the schedule has been overfull lately.

Yes, Emmett is 10 months old and has been part of the fambly for 8 months – unbelievable!!

Still has a blonde bottom and gorgeous tail feathers :)

Meanwhile…

Auggie came in Monday afternoon with a kind of spectacular wound. We got right into the vet – fortunately 15 minutes away in Bigfork. After a shave, cleanup and antibiotic shot, we came home.

Auggie was pretty sanguine about the whole thing and has been complaining about my enforcement of inside time. My reply is: “You MAY NOT go outside with a hole in your head!”

Honestly, inside is not that bad.

And Emmett … good grief, he is 10 months old.

Thanksgiving Day Eve

So, we progress!

XXL wire crate is now used only when I go out and about and can not take Emmett with me. Emmett does “go to crate” with no hesitancy!

Mostly, the house is now WIDE OPEN – YEA! We still have gates for some times when Emmett and/or Auggie have “the crazies”.

Crazies generally happen early morning or late afternoon.

The bedroom. The bedroom with NO “pen”. Currently, Emmett “goes to his bed” after some pre-bed snuggles. He sleeps in his bed or on the floor until about 3:00 a.m. when he wakes. I hear him shake and then pitter-patter and he comes on MY bed and settles.

Speaking of settling… this is a culmination of teaching Emmett and Auggie to settle – HOO RAH!

Light and Mountains!

Auggie.

Auggie and Emmett: Thanksgiving Eve.

Unbelievable !: Emmett is 8 mths and we are closing in on the end of 2018

We are one month into Autumn!

Emmett was 8 months old on October 12!

Emmett has been part of the family Summers for over 6 months!!

Life is good here at 785 La Brant Rd. Emmett is growing into an almost dog :) … 14 months for physical maturity … 2 years for the rest, but as we are firmly into adolescence … and not too many “teen” issues … I am grateful! We are following breeder and vet advice to wait as long as possible to neuter. This is a “medium-big dog” thing of allowing time for bones and joints to mature with the normal hormones. There are plusses and minuses for various issues, but I’m going with waiting until we “need” to.

Emmett continues to be a joy to be with, to play and teach and to learn from. Auggie continues to be a CHAMP at tolerating Emmett’s lapses into “puppy brain”. I love them both with all my heart and am so grateful that they are part of my life!

Time flies when you are having fun and we are HAVING FUN!

And in addition to Auggie and Emmett fun, we are having an absolutely spectacular Autumn to date! Some cool-cold weather and in the last 10 days some warm weather and the color … it is just great to be where we are and with the time to get outside and enjoy.

From the last weeks:

Auggie and Emmett

Yes, that is Bob, not Auggie and not Emmett.

But this photo, a favorite of mine, is a great memory of Mr. Bob enjoying the sun. And so, it was inspiration as well as loving memory when I saw Auggie, quiet in the sun … and eventually, Emmett joining him.

Through the years: Zack and Gus, Karl and Gus, Karl, Gus and Bob, Bob and Bear, Bear and Auggie … and now Auggie and Emmett: my heart, my loves.

This photo series started with seeing Auggie in the sun … remembering Bob’s photo and hoping to capture something like that…

And then Emmett got in the picture…

Auggie and Emmett

Into September: Emmett at 7 Months, some food and some weather

30 weeks old tomorrow and 7 months old on 9/12/2018.

So much fun, in so many ways.

My dream of all of us on the little sofa in the kitchen just keeps getting better!

Training continues, of course. There are stellar days and days when Emmett pretends he never heard the word “Sit”. I have learned to switch things up with fun, fast paced training of things I know he likes to do: touch, follow, left paw, right paw. All of the training is short sessions: some 2-3 minutes, some 5-10 minutes if things are going very well. When I see that he is “done” we either do sprinkler (see video at the end!) or fetch. If we’re inside, I sit on the floor and we have a play/snuggle session to end things.

What I continue to see is an increasing bond of trust interspersed with some fun/funny naughtiness. For the naughty, I leave the area, the fun stops and I do some chore elsewhere for a few minutes. All calm, no one yelled – no drama. He waits by the pet gate and we have a nice greeting when I return.

The other thing I’ve taken from the Kikopup’s training videos is to think about teaching in a way that allows Emmett to do the behavior, or the first part of the full behavior … in a successful way, i.e. setting him up for success and building on that. It requires that I use MY brain so win-win for all of us!

We’ve worked a lot on attention and focus. When on our woods walks, I will occasionally make my attention noise: kissy sound, squeaky toy, cough/sneeze. When he looks, I get all excited, click and if he comes to me: treat, treat, treat!! The idea is that I stay more fun than anything else. Mostly this works :)

So, squeaky toys.

This is the latest. Actually, it is a puzzle toy which is why I bought it. Emmett, an English Shepherd, is a very smart dog that is good at problem solving and seems happiest with things that engage his mind: training, snuffle mat, kong, playing chase with Auggie …

This toy is a hollow log and comes with 6 little squirrels. All of the squirrels have squeakers.

… It seemed like a good idea at the time :)

Actually it is!

Even with 6 little squeaky squirrels, it is a fun toy for Emmett. Not only does he have a good time removing the squirrels, but he stashes them around and plays with them.

PLUS, they are small enough that I can put 1 or 2 in my pocket when we walk and thus have a squeaky toy for attention getting and proof that I am WAY more fun than deer, etc.

One of the keys to positive reinforcement training is to teach in a way that allows the animal to make good choices because those choices are beneficial to him and so it is easy for him to decide to make the good choice. Yelling “NO”, as well as other “punishment” serve to make the animal afraid and unsure. I’ve SEEN the difference in both Emmett and Auggie as I’ve trained with this method. I do some click-treat with Auggie in tandem with Emmett to calm them both if play gets out of hand. I’ve also taught Auggie a hand signal if he wants to walk past Emmett … it is a signal that says that I have control of Emmett and Auggie can proceed without a chase.

Is that a “Thank you” from Auggie ??? Well, maybe not, but at least he does have a retreat!

On to food!

Only 3 more weeks of CSA :(

But this week, we headed into Fall bounty:

And after making Mel’s Kitchen Café Amazing Romaine Salad which required making candied nuts … GREAT salad, but those nuts!

Looking for other ways to make the nuts, I found: these cayenne spicy-sweet nuts . YOWZA! If you like a hot-sweet vibe, this is a recipe to try.

I made a double batch … munched on some and added the rest to vanilla ice cream …

… with David Lebovitz’s Salted Butter Caramel Sauce . I subbed cashew cream for the heavy cream – no calorie savings, but my caramel sauce has protein and fiber!!!

Next up is weather.

We have mostly turned the corner to Fall (Autumn).

HOO RAH!!

1 of 3 A/C units put away on August 26.

Help and supervision by Emmett and Auggie.

I put the other 2 away as well as fans that same day.

With the exception of 3 days last week, we’ve been smoke free and cool.

It is wonderful.

Overall, it was not the worst summer ever. And we are likely to have some warm days still, but I really think the worst is behind us. Fires continue and we need a fire-ending weather event. The loss of historic structures is heart breaking. And the animals.

But, to end on a fun note … a video. As usual, my video skills leave a lot to be desired. I am completely in awe of people who video pets and themselves while walking, playing, etc. The only thing I can say for myself is that I am slightly better at editing so mostly have edited out the wild camera swings to the sky and my feet. Emmett is the star and for myself, at least I did not talk “baby talk”…