Do they have wheat in them? My Cody dog is allergic to wheat.
I need a treat that I can carry in my pocket that does not crumble, and one that I do not have to use a zip lock baggie to keep the moisture soaking into my pocket.
We have a petco near us, I will look or them next time I am there.
Thanks sharon
What you can do too is that you mix up what you have taught him and do a couple of reps then move to the next thing he knows, then the next. Then maybe do three reps and then move to the next thing, or play with him and then return to the training.
JMO
Sharon
The meat rolls DO HAVE wheat bran and wheat flour. Read a nutritional review of them, and they are of average nutritional value, partly because of the wheat. They also contain garlic, canola oil, and yeast, all of which are controversial ingredients with some nutritional value. Sadie is not allergic to anything, but those with sensitive dogs would def need to be aware.
All in all, IMO, they are still more nutritional than most commercially prepared treats, and can, with the proper portioning, be part of a balanced diet.
What you can do too is that you mix up what you have taught him and do a couple of reps then move to the next thing he knows, then the next. Then maybe do three reps and then move to the next thing, or play with him and then return to the training.
JMO
Sharon
EXCELLENT idea! Ramsey might be ready to mix it up a bit and step up the the variety. I do a brush-up routine with Sadie that is highly engaging. I also use it to get her in drive for extended OB sessions.
I usually start with a couple of "Ready to do some training"s, then a recall, mark and treat. I'll then do some dynamic treat presentations and another recall. Then I'll call her to heel (au pied), call her to place (between my legs), and back to heel, marking and rewarding each (or make her try again if she misses).
From the heel, I'll have her change positions, sit-down-stand, then put her in a down, move off a few yards and recall her. From there I do some more dynamic reward work (this is where tug as a reward comes in handy) and then some more reps of the positioning work. I'll also do some very short heels with turns and about-turns all through the routine.
It has been a while since I have seen those. I don't have the mobility to move too fast because of a bad knee( too many years of distance running). So I have been using flirt pole and then when he gets the prey(tug) I grab the tug and play.
But Ramsey is a very large, strong, puppy. Right now at 8 mo., he is 78 very lean lbs!! So I have to be careful not to get pulled over!
He really loves that pole and the tug. Thanks for the reminder
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