Well, vocabulary may not be the right word, but it’s close
enough. I was talking to a friend the
other day who has an eight month old puppy he is training (she is a pet, not a
service dog) and he told me he has ten commands he is teaching her and that it’s
been hard work. I’m not sure if he is
trying to teach all ten commands at once or not. I’m thinking it would work best to train just
one or two commands at a time, then move on to the next one once the dog is
good at those.
So now I’m trying to think of how many commands Isaac
knows. He knows “sit,” “down,”, “stay”
and “come,” of course.
He knows “heel,” although he has a strong tendency to walk a
bit ahead of me, which is a problem.
We’re working on it.
We’re also working on “quiet” right now. When he wants attention and isn’t getting it,
he sometimes barks.
Then, he knows “get meds” and “get lights” (turn lights
on). He knows “get it,” which means to
pick up whatever I’m pointing at and give it to me. He knows “give it.” He knows “leave it” and fortunately does that
one well.
He knows “go in,” which means go in his crate, and “go
under,” which means go under the table at a restaurant (which he does not
particularly like doing, he prefers to be where he can watch everything that’s
going on).
He knows “load” and “unload,” which means get in/out of the
car.
He knows “circle,” which means to circle closely around me,
like making sure I have space around me and keeping people from getting too
close. He knows “front,” which means to
stand in front of me, which is what he does if I’m standing at a counter paying
for something, things like that.
He knows “OK,” which basically means to go ahead, like when
I put his food down he waits until I say “OK” to start eating and when I open
the door he waits until I say “OK” to go out.
He knows “watch me,” which means he watches me and pays
attention. I use that when we are out
and he’s getting distracted by stuff and not paying attention to what he’s
supposed to be doing.
Those might be all right now. There are some other commands I want to teach
him in the future, but first I want to work on “heel” and “quiet” some more.
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