Posts from the ‘Emmett’ category

The week in review: Emmett, Auggie and Springtime in Montana

I thought about titling this post: What I learned this week.

Boy, I have a LOT to learn.

Earlier in the week on Instagram I wrote that Emmett was in the puppy equivalent of the terrible twos. In retrospect, I got lazy in my observations and training and so allowed the natural progression of boldness to take over rather than me working with it. It took a timeout (for me!) and some rehashing in my mind of what I was doing to shake this out, regroup and move forward.

Oh, and one overreaction to Emmett chasing some deer … not far and right back to me but it surprised me. I made the rookie mistake of repeating his name which only serves to teach him that he can ignore his name. *sigh*

So … future moments of “oh this looks far more interesting than you”, result in me turning, running and sing-songing happy sounds. Emmett follows. Yea – I AM the most fun!!

Still working on toning down the intensity of the Emmett-Auggie wrestling matches but it gets better every day – particularly inside. Emmett KNOWS he is not supposed to be too rough but sometimes puppy-brain gets the upper hand. But as I move to intervene, Emmett backs off and sits.

Leave it: I can now put a treat on the ground or in my open hand with the words leave it and Emmett leaves it, looks at me: click he gets the treat. We’ll work at this level with the treat closer and closer.

Down: so happy with down. Emmett does it when I ask to calm for Auggie interaction and has done it with public distraction.

Sit is solid.

We’ve practiced the leash lightly. Tomorrow a new harness arrives. Emmett grew out of the first, also out of his first collar!

For the record, Emmett was just under 8 pounds when I picked him up 8 weeks ago. Today he is 24 pounds.

Yes – Emmett has been part of the family Summers for 8 weeks! 8 weeks of fun and games and learning and joy.

Meanwhile: Operation Fuschia for the front porch

On a gorgeous Saturday afternoon

Emmett LOVES to help with the watering…

And we stop and smell the Lupins!!

A beautiful Sunday!

See you later!

On Joy, Trust, Teaching and Learning

Puppy days…

Some days are kind of … one day well behaved and on the way to being a grown up dog and the next, it is back to puppy brain :)

Overall though, Emmett’s paying attention to me, his sitting to say “Please” … I am so pleased!!

“Leave it” is still in progress. If you watched the video linked in the last post, we have reliable eye contact. And open hand. But putting a treat on the ground … not there yet. We work on it every day but stop when it becomes frustrating for Emmett or me. And partly, it tends to become a rough game of pounce on my hand so that the learning goes out the window. So I stop and we do something else. This will likely be a months long thing to get to where he will “leave it” re Auggie, treasures in the woods and other very irresistible things.

Drop has recovered from a sometimes keep away game. There was a time of everything goes in the mouth: moss, deer droppings (the messier, the better), mushrooms (GAH! I only know a few for sure), rocks… And he got to know when something was “bad” and would not drop it – particularly a big mouthful of fresh droppings. So we stopped the woods walks. But now he’s gotten past that and drop is currently reliable. Moss and deer droppings – yes, but leaving the other stuff alone. Plus as I write this, he is 6 days past getting his last in the vaccination series, including Rabies. The 2 week mark from that vaccination will be a week from Monday, but he should have some pretty good defense in his system at this point. But like everything else, sometimes the puppy brain “I want it and I know you don’t want me to have it … this is fun!” takes over …

Growing: taller, longer, stronger, heavier. All input and output is great and normal! The Kongs … kind of a life saver. I’d not ever tried them before and after reading that they are a great delivery system of meals for puppies: takes time to eat and is fun – tried them out and WOW! Because I was doing so much click-treat for learning, I was concerned about staying in the range for food volume and the Kongs have relieved that concern. I use a mix of canned food – which is low cal and mostly water – and kibble and so there are meals but I have wiggle room for the click treats. I use primarily his kibble for treats with a bit of the yummy training treats mixed in. And for practicing recall and leash walking … high value hot dog bits!!

But now as in NOW (5/27), I am not click treating for learned behaviors – or at least very seldom: sit to say please, sit for food, go to your bed … those are well known behaviors so my click treat for those is maybe 1/5 of the time. Down is well known but it is so important that I click treat maybe 1/2 time at the moment. Recall … every time a click treat – SO important to me that recall is not an option and happens every single time. At any rate, it is wonderful to see that some of the withdrawal of click-treat has not affected the behavior – it happens!

I’ve often thought about how things were with Karl, my last 8 week old puppy … 17 years ago. We had a tough time with some of puppy-hood. Karl was very mouthy and my arms looked like I had a new kitten, not a new puppy. I read a lot and tried many “physical” corrections. Ultimately, he grew out of it and also ultimately he was a dog of my heart but we had a rough beginning and now I so wish I knew what I know now.

I kept notes of that time raising Karl and that experience is so different than what I’m experiencing with Emmett via the positive reinforcement. Via the notes and my memory and photos – I was hard on myself, hard on Karl … part of that difficult experience was that when I got Karl, I wanted him to immediately take Zack’s place. I lost Zack so suddenly and painfully and I just wanted the same dog life – immediately! Of course, completely unreasonable and eventually I came to understand what I was doing, relaxed and things went better. And now, thankfully, I am NOT doing the same with Emmett.

With Karl, I remember feeling a lot of pressure to be the perfect trainer. I felt that I needed to do everything perfectly, to not let anything get out of hand. And of course, so much was not perfect. And yet, we got to the point of being so close and Karl being so trustworthy. So, with Emmett, while I do want to get things right and certain things: recall and leash walking, have some special pressures (on me!), one of the things that I am aware of is that the building of bond, the learning, the play, the joy – those are all long term things. They do NOT happen in a day or in a week or in a month. We hopefully have years together and the reality is that training is lifelong and the first two YEARS are fairly intense as puppy grows into mature dog.

So, some function of my own age, my own experience, my focus on longer term and on thinking about what I’m doing is making this experience easier for all of us. Every night and every morning, I am grateful for Emmett and Auggie and how we are proceeding. And I think about the day before and what happened: what did I try to teach, what did I actually teach, what do I hope to do different tomorrow. I’ve made many mistakes, but I’ve made more non-mistakes: real teaching and fun and leading.

We are having SO.MUCH.FUN. I might be learning more than Emmett! I think I could write a book: “Life Lessons from my Puppy”.

Ok.

We have been a week with no piddle pads. The week before was just 1 piddle pad. No way would I say house training is complete, i.e. “bullet proof”, but we have a good 10 days of “outside potty” and Emmett knows to go to the door. Plus, at almost 15 weeks he has some “holding” power. I feel confident with leaving him in the gated kitchen-sunroom to shower, do short chores outside and in other parts of the house.

The crate is in the sunroom and the playpen is in the bedroom. My thought is to transition Emmett to sleeping less confined and also give him access to cool floor or soft bed. As it has been warmer, he is often choosing the floor vs one of his fleecy beds.

Auggie and Emmett: still a bit rougher play than I’d like, but Auggie initiates and participates. Still, I’m encouraging and click-treating low key play and occasionally separating them if it seems over the top. Improvement every day … mostly!

Socialization: Men, women, children have visited and Emmett has been stellar. He LOVES visitors and does not seem to have an issue with sex or size. Plus, I now often wear a hat and/or sunglasses outside and those have not affected any behavior – YEA!! Next week, we’ll start meeting some other dogs.

On things not puppy: the yard – GAH!! A mess. I bought grass seed and will try to recoup a little, mainly for dust management. I pretty much gave it up last year in the smoke and heat and taking care of Bear. It shows.

Fuschia: Good grief, this new variety which is Autumnale Fuschia – I LOVE it.

Food: We all eat. I’m baking bread but crackers have been purchased. We are 2 weeks into this year’s CSA and enjoying local, seasonal greens.

Memorial Day Weekend – hard to believe. It has been so far a warm and not too wet Spring.

On we go!

Tuesday morning in the woods

In typical Montana fashion we’ve gone from having heat on to opening the house in the cool morning and closing it up against the heat. Heat, being hot according to me which is 70F and above. It is 81F as I write this at 5:00 p.m. ish.

But, this morning, it was a wonderful 51F with a light breeze. The light in the woods was stunning. The company was spectacular. I recorded some images and shared them in an Instagram Story this morning. I liked the photos so much, here they are on the blog. All iPhone.

Toy Story

I initially bought a few toys for Emmett: the fleecy bone (now we have 3), a rope to chew and tug, 2 squeaky skins (no stuffing), some tennis balls and some nylabone chew things. All were fun for a bit. Well, the fleecy bone is still THE favorite but mostly as a pillow! But the other toys lost their luster after a bit of play.

Then there was the issue with the antique bear being SO desirable. Thankfully that Bear is tough! But, I had the idea that maybe other stuffed toys would be good and also a Kong and that rotating toys would keep things fresh.

Friday, the order from Chewy.com arrived:

Ok, now we have variety and I thought enough variety that I could cycle toys as the latest is always the best. And I got Auggie some treats which thankfully he loves, so he can participate in the click-treat game.

The stuffed toys went on the rocker.

Antique Bear was put out of Emmett’s reach and yes, I do know that tv is an antique itself. It plays DVDs and hooks up to Roku so does all I need :)

Back to toys.

The out of favor toys live in a basket out of Emmett’s reach and will make appearances as needed. Note the plastic water bottle … it is favorite toy which should give you a clue which way this story is headed.

It took a while, but Emmett finally saw the new stuffies in the rocker.

The moose (brown) won out over the alligator (green) and monkey (brown but with handles).

Yea for the moose!

Kong was a big hit. I watched several videos about how to introduce Kong to a puppy with no Kong experience. I’m not sure Emmett needed instruction. He emptied that little Kong in about 10 seconds.

Yes, well. The overall favorite “toy” ??? Any shoe.

Almost 17 years ago – May 18, 2001 – I brought home Karl, my last puppy. (Bear I got as a 6.5 year old).

Hmmm.

My cat Gus, was about 4.

Same, same.

The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree or something like that.

Meanwhile…

Follow me, follow you…

Relaxing in the front yard.

Lights out for a morning nap.

Week 4. It had a rocky start and my timetable fell apart. Some training fell apart. I gave myself a time out. For me, when things all seem to fall apart and it doesn’t seem like I have time to do anything but HURRY UP … I find that is exactly when I need to slow down. So, I put Emmett in his play pen, made myself a cup of tea and went into the far room to sit quietly and regroup. That did the trick, all got back on track and the remainder of the week went well.

Everything we’ve learned so far, we keep doing. Pooping has been happening outside. Piddling is mostly outside, but when not, it is on the piddle pads and I’ve reduced the number of pads around. Emmett is growing. Auggie and I love him more every day. Good times!

We started working on Leave It. Different from Drop, Leave it is “don’t touch, don’t take it, don’t even think about it” :). It will be a good thing to know. It will take awhile.

Here is the video that shows how I’m teaching it:

***I’m going to be doing some classes with Emmett primarily to train with distractions, but also so that an experienced trainer can assist with how I’m doing as far as timing, etc. That trainer recommended the site that is the video source: Smart Dog University (Laurie Luck, trainer) . Both the website and the youtube channel have great information and all is easily searchable. I really like Laurie Luck’s calm approach to everything.

***Toys, etc. I’ve been buying all things pet from Chewy.com . Prices and quality are good and they ship fast with free shipping for over $49 order. The stuffed toys are Kong brand and seem very well made. The stuffed toys can be expensive ($12-20) and these were not ($7-9).

Week 3 with Emmett: moving toward a new normal

I think the best summation of week 3 with Emmett would be that we are all feeling more comfortable. And also PROGRESS – progress on everything!

More comfortable with each other and with new routines.

Emmett’s training in a nutshell: Sit, the beginnings of a sit-stay, hand target, drop (drop whatever you have in your mouth), recall, down. Down was the trickiest. We started working on that on Thursday and it was just yesterday (Saturday) that we got completely there. Sit actually came from work with the breeder. And prior to this week Emmett had learned “go to your bed/mat”, “into your crate”. Outside there is a click treat for focus on me.

This form of training, called many things: operant conditioning, clicker (marker) training, positive reinforcement. I am so enthusiastic about how this works. I am not yelling “no”, all training happens as play, the communication is fast and incredible. In addition to the above tasks, I used click-treat to shape Emmett’s and Auggie’s behavior to more calm, have fun together, tone down the wrestling. If you’ve looked at my Instagram feed and especially my stories … it is pretty incredible how they are doing.

And of note: this method of training is used for athletics, autistic children and many other forms of teaching. There is a site: Tag Teaching

On my Wednesday story, I threw caution to the wind and posted that we’d had success with a schedule (all times approximate) that got us all fed, played with, walked … and me to my desk to work (showered and dressed!!) by 9:00.

This has stuck. I don’t watch the clock, but generally, an approximation worked all week and we continued through the weekend. Color me thrilled!

The little couch. Well, the first days – Yes! But then Emmett got bolder and wigglier and we had some days where it was Auggie and me and some days where it was Emmett and me.

This week, while he is still a bit wiggly, we had several “all together” mornings:

The Auggie and Emmett scene:

We also started working on being together on the front porch:

Ok.

The big deal: house training, i.e. potty training.

It is mostly happening outside.

But …

… when it doesn’t, it happens on the piddle pads.

I’d just bought a LOT of the pads for Bear before he died … I kept them. Thankfully!

Emmett got them immediately. He goes outside when we go out and when he goes inside it is generally because I am distracted and don’t get him out. But he goes right to the pads so I know he is aware that there are appropriate places to go. Making the jump to “asking” to go out … I am confident it will happen and meantime, I am not fussed about the use of the pads.

Not getting fussed, is a freeing part of the positive training approach. I don’t reward inside potty like I do outside, but there is no punishment for inside. Similarly, other behaviors that I don’t reward, I redirect and/or remove whatever from the environment. Because all of the learning is happening with play and fun, the subtle redirect and soft “no” is understood. All of this adds up to a happy and calm learning environment. HOO-RAH!

And in the woods:

It has been another happy, love-filled week with Auggie and Emmett.

I think that Auggie agrees that the “kid” is a wonderful heart healer and great addition to the family Summers

The news from puppy central

So my plan … are you laughing ???

My plan was that week 1 with Emmett I would work 1/2 days and that’s what I told my client/programming team.

I managed about 1/4 time.

But after a little weekend reorganization, I thought: “ok, I’ve got this … normal time”.

I managed about 1/2 time. GAH! I will be eating beans next month!!

I hired some help for yard cleanup with the intent of working a bit this weekend. So far, the yard is beautiful and paid for. Work so far = 0 hours.

My workout routine has gone by the wayside as well but I figure that all of the puppy in and out and up and down and etc, etc makes up for it. I hope.

Seriously, though. The time these last two weeks working with Emmett and Auggie – priceless in happy love as well as a calm (mostly) puppy that is fitting into the family Summers. Auggie deserves a medal for how he is adjusting to Emmett and for what he is tolerating!

I consider training to be a lifelong thing … sometimes a regroup, sometimes a lightness, but always there. I am so pleased with how “clicker training” aka positive reinforcement is going with Emmett. And I have some affirmation from the couple who cleaned my yard and some woods area. Jason and Kay have much dog experience and clicker training experience and they were so impressed with how Emmett is doing. They spent time working with Emmett and me – so valuable to have this kind of experience: new BFF! (***Jason trained a Belgian Malinois for bomb work!)

So. Photos. Proceed!!

So funny. The play is kind of rough, but Auggie is all in.

Oh, boy!

This is the first time Emmett did the “air out the parts” thing. He has not liked being “upside down” in my arms. Is that a thing that they grow out of … don’t know.

Self explanatory.

I bought Auggie a new tower for the sunroom. My thought was to give him a spot to get away from “THE BABY”. I didn’t pay attention to the step configuration. But so far, so good and this is the first time that Auggie used the tower perch.

Sticks are the best chew things!!

Snow is great.

Sun is wonderful and all is good with Auggie, Emmett and me.