Invisible Barriers Part 1- Clicker Dog Training Tricks
Posted by admin on 14 November, 2011
25 Comments
This item was filled under [ Dog Articles ]
This is the first part of a two part series. Kikopup spends nearly all of her time making free training videos and educating the public for free. If you would like to make a donation to support her work, simply go to the link below and click on the donate button. You can donate as little or much as you like. My dream would be to be able to support myself from creating free content that everyone around the world could access no matter what their situation! www.dogmantics.com “Dog Training” “Clicker Training” “Dog Tricks” how to train a dog tips to stay behind a barrier www.dogmantics.com

25 Comments on “Invisible Barriers Part 1- Clicker Dog Training Tricks”
XD I’m so weird, I always get so happy/excited when the dog in the video succeeds
@dsostringbean Maybe you can lure the dog out of the area, and add a verbal cue?
@Ega060295 You could substitute the clicker by saying “Yes” or “Good boy/girl” instead of using a clicker, but using a clicker is better because of more precise timing + the dog definitely knows what it means, and we say yes or accidentally say “good boy” all the time so the dog might misunderstand it. Or maybe you could use some made-up word
Super brilliant.
Thank you Emily! I have been looking forward to this tutorial! I love your fist pump dance when trisch gets it. I do exactly the same thing when my puppy masters something.
Thank you Emily! Another GREAT video! I’ve already shared it.
When I click thumbs up it never changes the count on your videos. And I have to ask, how tall is your mailbox, wow?
Super, thank you so much Emily. Since our yard isn’t fenced in (but far from a road) I love the idea of a small rope close to the ground that you show. Might be a good one to put at the passage between the trees that leads to our neighbours house. Thanks !
Great concept, and Trisch picked it up so quickly! Going to watch the second part now
i would leave my laptop in my yard if it was fenced lol
Thank you so much Emily been waiting and hoping and now I can watch and teach.
Wonderful. You are very generous by posting these video tutorials for free. I can see it’s all about timing and making sure you don’t go to many steps ahead. My Aussie Maggie is very grateful for your videos and so am I. Thank you from Australia
These are wonderful! I will most definitely share them!
Wow, brilliant video! and absolutely beautiful mal!
You are such a great teacher, even electronically! You have my utmost respect and gratitude for what you offer to us all, both four-leggers and two-leggers.
Thank you , Emily
Awesome video Emily! I have a barrier technique using little orange cones, but I’m going to try this technique with my Siberian Husky and see how it works for her. THanks!
@nammikrans Me too. We can be weird together.
My doberman picked this up in ten minutes. I did this training with a Golden Retriever who had never been trained with a clicker, and who I am only dogsitting for the day. The Golden picked it up in 15 minutes. This method works beautifully.
Granted I’ve only used this to teach the dogs to stay in the kitchen unless I release them, so it’s a lower-distraction environment but I’m sure this will translate beautifully to any environment.
@amazingmutts
Yayy!
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!! I have been waited for months for this tutorial! You have no idea how happy I am!
DDDDDDD
@MsZoraZ whoops, sorry, “I have been waiting (not waited) for months….tutorial!”
I wondered, what is there is a time when you want them to come over the barrier? Like if you were to take the for a walk? Would you have to go out the back door every time? That wouldn’t work at my house… Thanks
It’s so great, good job honey <3 <3 <3
hey kikopup, its nice when you put a real demonstration like in the beginning of the video with splash! =) nice video though
Thank you again, for your generosity, your talent, and your compassion for all dogs who will be helped by all your videos.
Good job, Emily! We learned this in the Karen Pryor Academy and I have been using this technique with my clients’ dogs.