[nagdu] Improving House behaviors

L Gwizdak leg1950 at cox.net
Mon Aug 4 20:52:39 UTC 2014


Hi Julie M,
Is this a Guiding Eyes dog or a Seeing Eye dog? Just curious as both schools 
expect good house behavior in the dogs.

I went to Seeing Eye.  While there, we'd have food in the Common Louonge 
alot and this is great practise in making the dog behave in this 
environment.  We'd sit on the couches and eat pizza, cookies and the dogs 
were expected to lie quietly at our feet and not looking for the food. Did 
you have that opportunity at Guiding Eyes?

Your dog will have to learn self control around humans eating and should 
NEVER be fed anything while you are eating.  Make sure others are abiding by 
this no-feeding rule.

Lyn
"Asking who's the man and who's the woman in an LGBT relationship is like 
asking which chopstick is the fork" - Unknown
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Cindy Ray via nagdu" <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
To: "Julie McGinnity" <kaybaycar at gmail.com>; "NAGDU Mailing List,the 
National Association of Guide Dog Users" <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Saturday, August 02, 2014 4:44 AM
Subject: Re: [nagdu] Improving House behaviors


I think the idea of “going to the blanket” or “go to your place” is the 
terminology used at TSE. They suggested that this place should have things 
there that the dog loves so that it doesn’t feel it is being punished.

Cindy

On Aug 2, 2014, at 12:06 AM, Julie McGinnity via nagdu <nagdu at nfbnet.org> 
wrote:

> Hi friends,
>
> I feel a little ridiculous even asking some of these questions, but my
> dog's house manners are not acceptable to me.  I've only had him for
> too months, so maybe I'm expecting too much out of him, but I hope
> not.
>
> First of all, if I eat a snack or a meal while sitting on the couch,
> he is all over me.  I tell him to sit, and nothing happens.  At that
> point, I want to put him on tie down, but I also don't want tie down
> to be a punishment.  I do not currently have a crate and honestly
> don't have the funds to buy him one right now.  The other thing is
> that I want to deal with the problem; I want him to be able to lay
> down by me while I eat a meal or a snack.
>
> The other problem is that he picks up stuff-clothes, stuffed animals,
> stuff like that.  He does it sneakily, but even when I've found him
> taking things, he has not learned.  I tell him know and put the thing
> away, but he is not learning that this is not ok.
>
> Any suggestions?  Sometimes I feel like when I take something away
> from him or give him a command, it doesn't even register in his head
> that I'm telling him to do something or telling him he can't have
> something.  BTW, he listens well when we do obedience, and his guide
> work is great.  But I have high expectations when it comes to house
> manners, and I want productive ways to work on them.
>
> Thanks guys!
>
> -- 
> Julie McG
> National Association of Guide dog Users board member,  National
> Federation of the Blind performing arts division secretary,
> Missouri Association of Guide dog Users President,
> and Guiding Eyes for the Blind graduate 2008
> "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that
> everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal
> life."
> John 3:16
>
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