Clicking with Your Dog: Step-by-Step in Pictures | 
enlarge | Author: Peggy Tillman Publisher: Sunshine Books (MA) Category: Book
Buy New: $39.95
New (1) Used (7) from $35.00
Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 1204879
Media: Paperback Pages: 200 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 7.5 x 0.8
ISBN: 1890948055 Dewey Decimal Number: 636.70887 EAN: 9781890948054 ASIN: 1890948055
Publication Date: March 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: By; Peggy Tillman, Published by Sunshine Books, (c) 2000 Paperback
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Product Description "Clicking with Your Dog" is the answer for all pet owners who want a dog to be a real partner and friend. The author's step-by-step illustrations explain the clicking process more clearly than ever before. Soon you will truly understand your dog, and thanks to the clicker, your dog will understand you!
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
Clicking with your Dog October 4, 2008 Joann K. Alonzo This is a very clear illustration and explanation of working with your dog using the clicker method. I like it.
SCAM ALERT - Do NOT Get Fooled by This Method July 16, 2008 Kevin Salem (Sacramento, USA) 1 out of 11 found this review helpful
This is the sister of cookie training. Why use a clicker when you can use your voice? You are not mute for crying out loud. You can mark a command, a behavior, or even a trick much better with your voice. Besides, this method is for dog owners with three arms. One, to hold those treats, two to click around, and three to hold on to that leash. If you truly believe that dogs like to please us, then why rely on a clicker or even a treat? Think about it. Your dog should sit because you said so and not because of a bacon strip. How I know this??? Because I actually train dogs for a living and am one the top in my field. These guys tell you to give your dog treats just for being alive. You will end up with a fat dog that drools and licks it's mouth every time you ask it to sit or lay down. It doesn't take much skill or talent to bribe a dog with treats and then call it dog training.
Clicker training at a glimpse September 26, 2007 Fawn (Israel) The illustrations and the short, exact written instructions make it a wonderful handbook both for novices and experienced people who want to clicker train pets.
Insightful, Great Book May 24, 2007 Catherine Moser 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This woman really knows dogs. Her training methods really work. This book definitely changed the way I relate to my dogs, and it made training so much easier.
Very usable guide, but don't use raisins or grapes as treats! April 10, 2007 Debbie the Book Devourer (Waltham, MA USA) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I have read a couple of clicker training books and have also gotten advice from a clicker-savvy friend, but read this to see if it had anything more to offer me. For those who don't know, clicker training uses a marker (the clicker) to mark the exact moment your dog is doing something you want her to. It's very powerful because it sends a kind of snapshot straight to your dog of what you want. You then, of course, give some kind of reward after clicking. I liked that this book had lots of pictures and presented the information in different ways, for people with different styles of learning. Also, the author shows that there is more than one way to teach a behavior, even within the clicker training philosophy. To me, this is where many dog training books fall short. They present one way of approaching a new task, but there are many types of dogs and many types of trainers! To be shown that shaping, luring, and just waiting for behaviors are all possible ways to succeed is very encouraging. Of course, each task must still be broken down into baby steps, and each training session must be positive. My one and only complaint is that Ms Tillman suggests raisins and grapes in her list of possible treats to use for your dog. There is anecdotal evidence that raisins and grapes can cause kidney failure in dogs. It's not necessarily proven, but why take a chance? Read this book, but skip the fruit of the vine! And have fun!
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