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DOG TRAINING – USEFUL TIPS. Dogs and puppies ... Unwanted Behaviour Stop Barking. Any puppy may bark for no obvious reason when you first bring it home - it may be a sign of a lack of confidence, or nervousness, so please don't act to artificially control the barking or yapping of your puppy straightaway. However, if it becomes a nuisance, then you may have to act. Perhaps our natural reaction to recurrent barking is to shout at the dog until it stops. This is something that most of us have done, and whilst it can bring short term results it seldom solves the problem and can even aggravate it by teaching the dog that loud is good! Your dog may bark at visitors, when the doorbell rings, the newspaper drops through the letterbox etc. The first thing to do here is to train all the family in a united approach which may be to say “thank you” at the first bark and then command the dog to sit. In other words you are saying “Your job is done, now let me take over.” You should not let your dog become the dominant partner in your relationship. Dogs often bark when playing outside within a secure garden, and any passerby or loud noise is the trigger for such unwanted barking. These are the times when you are not present, and which can be a cause of neighbour unrest which may even lead to a complaint to the local authorities. It is here that modern training aids come into play in the form of an anti-bark collar. This should NEVER, NEVER, - EVER be an electric shock collar which is cruel. You should use a painless training collar which incorporates a harmless spray to discourage barking. This is the method favoured by vets and animal behaviourists, and which has been proven to be 88% effective. The painless collar has the great advantage that you are able to decide where it is worn, and so you can associate places where barking is not wanted and places where it is OK – for instance indoors at night when the dog can warn against intruders.
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