Playing dog training games is one of the best ways to teach your dog useful skills (like impulse control) and bond with your dog. You might remember our popular post on impulse control games, but it’s time for a bit of an update. We’ll include some of the old favorites in this post on dog training games, but we’re not limiting this post to just impulse control.
8. Best for Advanced Leash Skills: One-Two-Three Walking
This technique works really well to help the dog process the environment and learn to handle distractions. 1-2-3 walking is one of the Pattern Games developed by Leslie McDevitt. Have some treats in your pocket or treat pouch, but don’t lure your dog around with the treats.
This game is really simple. Just count out loud, “One, two, three.”
Right when you say “three”, give your pup a treat. Start out just delivering treats right to your pup’s mouth until he gets it that treats come when you say three.
Then start to give the treat right next to the pocket or seam of your pants at head height for your dog. Keep your hand touching your leg so that you give the treat nice and close. This helps train your dog to stay super close to you.
9. Best for Teaching Recall: Hide-and-Seek
This game is a great way to build your dog’s love of “come when called,” exercise her nose, and play around on rainy days. Start by simply hiding behind a door or in another room (make it easy), then call your dog. When she eventually finds you, give her a huge reward with treats or toys. If she’s really struggling, call her again — but don’t make continuous noise.
Gradually build up the difficulty of where you hide around the house. You can eventually play this game outdoors as a really fun way to build up speed and joy when you call your dog to you. It turns “come” into a game for your dog!
I also merge this game with #10, “Go Find It” by teaching dogs to go find a specific person in the family (using the techniques below). Then you can have the person hide with treats or toys and reward your dog for finding them.
10. Best for Rainy Days: Go Find It!
Teach your dog to go find a specific toy. This game works especially well with dogs that love playing with toys.
- Start with just one toy out. Tell your dog to “go get your X” or “go find X.” Whatever phrase you pick, be consistent. Reward your dog by grabbing the toy by playing with it. If you say your cue in an excited voice and point at the toy, most dogs will get this right away.
- Fade out pointing and just use the verbal cue. Continue to reward your dog by playing with the toy when they grab it.
- Introduce another toy to the picture. You might want to start with another toy that’s a bit less excited than the named toy. Now, only reward your dog when he grabs the correct toy.
- Start to name a second toy using steps one and two. This will be easiest if your dog loves both toys about the same. If your dog goes bonkers for the ball and is kind of “meh” about a squeaky toy, don’t try to use those two toys! That sets you up for failure.
- Repeat step three with the two named toys. Start to alternate which toy you ask for.
- Gradually build up the number of toys that your dog knows by name.
This game is a great mental and physical puzzle for dogs that love toys. It’s also a good way to wear out your dog if the weather is bad outside and you need to get out some energy!
11. Best for Snappy Obedience: Ready, Set, DOWN!
This is one of my all-time favorite games to play with my dog. This tug-based game teaches your dog to drop toys on cue and follow cues when he’s really excited. This is a great way to teach your dog to listen to you in distracting environments.
- Ensure that your dog is rock-solid with a cue or two. At the minimum, your dog needs to know how to play tug, how to drop a toy on cue, and how to do one more behavior.
- Start to play tug with your dog. Just play lightly at first — you don’t want to get your dog super riled up.
- Cue your dog to drop the toy.
- Cue your dog to sit, lie down, touch, or whatever other cue he knows really well.
- Reward your dog for listening by restarting the game.
- Intermittently just re-start the game when your dog drops the toy.
- Repeat. If possible, mix in different cues to make your dog really think.
- Gradually increase the intensity of your tug game — but if your dog ever stops being able to listen, reduce the intensity level and try again.
You can also play this game with a flirt pole or while playing fetch, though it’s most commonly seen when playing tug.
12. Best for Bored Dogs: Nosework
I love nosework. I’ve already written a whole blog post on playing nosework with your dog. Nosework is a great way to exhaust your dog. It takes a lot of work to find hidden treats with your nose! Dogs also feel calmer when they’re sniffing. Hunting for food with their nose is incredibly natural for them, and this game does wonders for calming stressed-out dogs.
As a quick recap:
- Use boxes with treats in them to teach your dog to look for treats using his nose.
- Gradually increase the complexity of the treat-in-box game by putting boxes in different configurations.
- Start to hide some treats outside of boxes
- Add some vertical complexity.
- Try new locations.
This is really all you need to do to get started in nosework. If you’re really interested in nosework, check out my much longer blog on it to get started.
13. Best for Teaching Heel: Silky Leash
This technique was developed by Grisha Stewart. It teaches the dog to yield to small amounts of pressure on the leash. Start inside, in a boring room, and have some treats ready.
You can use a clicker if you are used to using one, or simply mark the right behavior with a short word, such as “yes!”
Clip the leash on the collar, and wait until things are calm. Apply a slight pressure on the leash to one side, and wait for your pup to yield a bit to that pressure. Your pup might actually move towards the leash pressure, or just shift his weight a bit. Take whatever you get!
Mark the moment, and give a treat. Wash, rinse, and repeat until you can see the dog respond readily to very slight leash pressure while inside, then start working on it in a familiar place outside.
Gradually increase the distractions while playing this game to teach your dog to follow you with feather-light leash pressure all around town.
Source: journeydogtraining.com
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