Hi all!
First of all, I'd like to say that this is my first post to this forum. I just found it online today. I'm pretty excited that it exists so I can learn new things about my Golden.
I was recently given a full-blooded Golden Retriever. She comes from really good bloodlines and I feel like she'd be easy to train once I figure out where to start. A guy gave her to me because he didn't have enough time to spend with her and so she retaliated by digging up his sod yard. Since she did this, he had to keep her in a kennel/pen that was about 80 square feet for about ten hours a day with a break or two.
I have several things that I definitely want to teach her. I just have to figure out where to start. She knows how to sit most of the time. She just doesn't sit when she is excited. My boyfriend has been working with her and trying to teach her to lay down, but we aren't able to communicate this to her without bringing our hands all the way down to the ground to show this to her. We'd like to just be able to say 'down' and she would go down. This would be especially helpful when we have visitors.
She also has issues when we walk her because she wants to run up to every person, squirrel, or other dog that she sees. She tries to drag me around and a lot of the time, she succeeds. I have tried to give her a shorter amount of her leash and I have also tried to keep her leash up straight and taught. This helps some, but she still gets to sniffing things and will take off without any notice. I'd just like to be able to control her walking and teach her that she can visit with other dogs and people with my permission. Any tricks for walking on a leash?
I would also like to teach her to stay and play dead. Does anyone have any suggestions on how I should go about doing this? I know she's a smart girl, but I just feel like she's probably a little harder to train than a puppy since she wasn't trained really at all for the first year of her life.
Any help would be appreciated by anyone! I know that my sweet girl will be successful if we have the right guidance.
Thanks all,
Ashley and Brinkley
First of all, I'd like to say that this is my first post to this forum. I just found it online today. I'm pretty excited that it exists so I can learn new things about my Golden.
I was recently given a full-blooded Golden Retriever. She comes from really good bloodlines and I feel like she'd be easy to train once I figure out where to start. A guy gave her to me because he didn't have enough time to spend with her and so she retaliated by digging up his sod yard. Since she did this, he had to keep her in a kennel/pen that was about 80 square feet for about ten hours a day with a break or two.
I have several things that I definitely want to teach her. I just have to figure out where to start. She knows how to sit most of the time. She just doesn't sit when she is excited. My boyfriend has been working with her and trying to teach her to lay down, but we aren't able to communicate this to her without bringing our hands all the way down to the ground to show this to her. We'd like to just be able to say 'down' and she would go down. This would be especially helpful when we have visitors.
She also has issues when we walk her because she wants to run up to every person, squirrel, or other dog that she sees. She tries to drag me around and a lot of the time, she succeeds. I have tried to give her a shorter amount of her leash and I have also tried to keep her leash up straight and taught. This helps some, but she still gets to sniffing things and will take off without any notice. I'd just like to be able to control her walking and teach her that she can visit with other dogs and people with my permission. Any tricks for walking on a leash?
I would also like to teach her to stay and play dead. Does anyone have any suggestions on how I should go about doing this? I know she's a smart girl, but I just feel like she's probably a little harder to train than a puppy since she wasn't trained really at all for the first year of her life.
Any help would be appreciated by anyone! I know that my sweet girl will be successful if we have the right guidance.
Thanks all,
Ashley and Brinkley