$7.99 Flat Rate Shipping
$7.99 Flat Rate Shipping
Conditions apply. Learn more.
Wishlist
May 18, 2011

My puppy has no play drive. What can I do to develop his drive to do protection work?

Full Question:
Mr. Frawley,

I wrote to you about my 6 month old Rott. Thanks for your advice. Just finish watching your (Bite Training Puppies). My question now is that I just got the pup when it was already 6 months follow your videos, my pup has no play drive. I tried playing with the sack, but he has no interest in biting the sack. How should I start his play drive with his behavior? He has a lot of avoidance when I try to follow your instructions on the video. What should I do?
Ed
Ed Ed's Answer:
Here are some options to building prey drive:
  1. Take a ball and put it on a nylon string. See if you can get the pup to follow it. Treat it like a cat - when the pup goes over to smell it - make it jump away but only about a foot away. If it will follow then just as its nose is at the ball make it bounce away a little more. There is an art to this. The key is to build the dogs interest and not bounce the ball too far away from the dog. Keeping the ball close to the pup but elusive. The pup can grab the ball every now and then and play tug (if it will) you can also have the dog try and chase balls (with the string attached and see if the dog will chase and play with them. To build prey drive you have to get it to chase before you get it to grip.

  2. Make the sack smaller. If this means cutting one up then do it. Use a hand towel rather than a sack - its softer on his mouth. Tie the sack on a string and treat it exactly like you treated the ball on a string. If the pup will grab it - give it a small jerk so it comes out of his mouth (like it is alive) Go right back into playing with it on a string. This will build drive.


I hope some of these ideas work. This is not as simple as it may sound. Young dogs must learn what a prey item is. They don't instinctually think that a sack or ball is a prey item. They have to learn that they are fun to play tug with. So there is a lot of emphasis on the handlers developing the skills to bring out the drive that their dog has.

And finally - there are some dogs that are not fit for this work. These dogs have no prey drive and they cannot and should not be trained in protection work. Dogs have to have prey work for bite work.

100% (5 out of 5)
respondents found this answer helpful
Did you find this Q&A helpful?
Expert Dog Trainer Cindy Rhodes
100% (5 out of 5)
respondents found this answer helpful

Did you find this Q&A helpful?

Recommended Products
Scroll to Top