Blue Heeler with Severe Dog Aggression - Dog Rehabilitiation - DCTK9

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MUST WATCH dog training case Blake walks you through his initial meet with Foxtrot the Blue Heeler along with his progress during a 2 week DctK9 board and conditioning program and working with the owner upon pickup!
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This makes me so happy. That dog deserves to be able to play, walk, and socialize with other dogs without such fear. Great job.

nikisawyers
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We just rescued two blue heelers. They have never been socialized at all. A lot of work ahead of us. So glad I found this channel. I like the calming approach and technique✌️🐾

debbiethomas
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Heelers are so smart! She was already changing her entire attitude with the first few corrections. My heeler learns anything in just a few tries. Foxtrot is a very good girl.

little_lion_heart
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I love seeing people having cattle dogs living alternative lives. My Red heeler has so much personality, she loves being with other dogs and other people. She’s never chased cattle, but she loves Chasing a ball or a stick! Very impressed with the transformation of this dog!

ally
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A dog who is fear aggressive becomes calmer when the develop confidence in themselves. Giving an ACD the opportunity to successfully complete a task, on their own, and be praised for that accomplished is a great confidence builder. Letting them figure out what it is you're expecting of them, after teaching the objective, gives them confidence. For example, going through a door and expecting them to sit/stay until you are through first. Allowing them to go with you to the door and you waiting quietly until they problem solve what to do next. When they finally sit, praise them and then praise them when they wait for you.
ACDs are praise driven, and developing a 'disney land" voice while praising goes a long way. Finding ways for them to successfully problem solve builds confidence and keeps them mentally stimulated. An ACD needs as much mental stimulation as the do physical, sometimes more.
Remember, an ACD is thinking two steps ahead of you at all times while you provide firm and consistent leadership so they trust you and your leadership. ACD's are OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder)and want things done the same way, at the same time, with the same toys and in the same place every time. They like consistency and will try to bully you to do it their way. It works well if your life is on a schedule and you're prepared to, say… take them to catch their disc for an hour as soon as you get home. Mine gets me out of bed every morning at 6am, no matter the day and has for 14yrs. That just starts our day…
I wouldn't trade one minute of our time together since I adopted her as a rescue in 2006.
BTW, my Clara is a city girl and in the beginning we did spend 20-hrs a week at a herding training center, for 5 consecutive years. She still challenges my authority every day and as our trainer once told me many years ago, I had to be the "bigger bitch" in the pack.
Remember, it takes 10 "atta girls" to 1 "bad girl" to train a good dog, or raise a healthy child. So love them, develop a common language, be consistent and give them physical and mental exercise every day. They will be your personal assistant, protector, fitness motivator and best buddy every day of their life if you do.

jodysheridan
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This made me so happy seeing her in the end with the other dogs and she looked so happy! 💜

kimberleyrose
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Good job. I have one of these guys. I adopted him because the owner couldn't handle or housebreak him at four months. Love this breed. They need firm boundaries, strong leadership, and a lot of mental/physical challenge. ACDs rock with the right owners!

MercurySunlight
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Wonderful work!! She looks much happier too!

tgchism
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Very impressive 👍. I'm learning so much. I'd like to have a blue heeler as my next dog. Beautiful dog!!!

ljvargas
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Well done! Pretty simple process that most folks don't understand. Changing the focus point is so big

caflet
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Got my Heeler at 7 weeks, he’ll be 15 at Christmastime. Well trained and one cool cucumber from day one. Training was such a joy just the greatest dog in the world. Got him a dog of his own a few years back, that made him happy. Now a senior K9 he will be surely missed...

scottdavis
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I have to laugh at some of these comments. Great recommendations, either move or sell the dog, HA!! Do you hear yourselves?? How about work with the dog in it's environment and help it become more comfortable and less stressed as seen in the video. Sure, this breed isn't the best choice to live in the city but the choice has already been made so it was time to do something about it. I know whenever I hear from a client that says they were given this advice I already know the type of trainer it came from. Good work Blake.

anthonybly
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I’m so glad she developed peace and was rewarded with friends .... Awww

jenniferchristensen
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I have a 15 wk. old Blue Heeler pup, and I think the thing that helped the most was to bring him in to my office with me to interact with my co-workers. Now he thinks every stranger is a potential friend, greeted with wagging tail and puppy kisses... then the velociraptor Dingo comes out to play. Watch the nipping behaviors too and get a handle on them biting. One trainer told me to stick my fingers down my pup's throat and make him gag when he bites for negative reinforcement, and that works pretty well. Socialization is a MUST with this breed, as well as engaging their brain! Any time a Heeler pup gets fussy they're probably bored - train them and exercise them, then they'll sleep for 2+ hours.

cptcosmo
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I rescued a heeler mix who's people aggressive. So, I definitely can relate. I start a board and train program with Off Leash K9 on Aug 17th. Great video. Great trainer!

thegiantpaperpanda
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Exactly like my dog! I have a 1yr 6 month old small female chihuahua (Jack Russell cross). Indoors she amazing and very obedient and focused. The second we step out of the house, she's reactive to literally EVERYTHING! This started from 14 weeks old when we got her! leaves, wind, cars, bikes, dogs, men, people. Now she's getting better outside, but seems to be getting worse with other dogs. She goes from 0-100 in just a second and nothing will distract or break her focus until the other dog has disappeared from sight 2-3mins later. She is small so she spins in circles, lunges, hairs on her back all stands up, growls, does not stop even when picked up. However, when she gets very close to the other dog shes quiet as a mouse! i just don't want to encourage the behavior by letting her near the dogs when she screams. The smallest size head harness (Size 0) does not fit her. Taken her to 3 sessions of dog training classes so far and she literally barked for the whole 1hr 30 mins sessions!!!...PLEASE HELP

lolagray
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From a pure body language stand point it's pretty clear how unenthusiastic the dog is to return to it's owner. The dog was clearly not having a good time. At 10:41 she begins to move towards the owner with her head really low, does a shake off, when she arrives to the owner and gets petted there's lip licking. Clear indicators of stress. She is basically doing it to avoid discomfort not because she wants to.

JoelGFigures
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No matter where you live, you can have issues with your dog. Its sooo good the rehab of this beautiful dog! Congrats

amysmiles
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Great job!  I see a very talented, confident,  legit heeler using her innate skills (high prey drive) on the only sources available to her in her daily routine.  Thank you for taking the time to work with one of the smartest, most athletic breeds around.

AllAmericanDawgs
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Thank you very much for this video. Your timing, like every good trainer's, is impeccable. Having dog-owners see the art and effectiveness of good timing is a HUGE help!!!!

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