Team Dog: How To Train Your Dog - The Navy SEAL Way PDF

Similar documents
Trident K9 Warriors: My Tale From The Training Ground To The Battlefield With Elite Navy SEAL Canines PDF

Cats: Cat Care- Kitten Care- How To Take Care Of And Train Your Cat Or Kitten PDF

Training Your Dog to Cast

Read & Download (PDF Kindle) PUPPY TRAINING: Ultimate Guide To Housebreak Your Puppy In 5 Days Or Less (Puppy Dog Training Guide Part 1)

Read & Download (PDF Kindle) Dog Training For Dummies

Visual Reward/Correction. Verbal Reward/Correction. Physical Reward/Correction

How To Be Your Dog's Best Friend: A Training Manual For Dog Owners PDF

Dog Shaming 2018 Day-to-Day Calendar Free Ebooks PDF

Causes of Aggression

Robbins Basic Pathology: With VETERINARY CONSULT Access, 8e (Robbins Pathology) PDF

YELLOW VIBRATION BARK COLLAR

The Evidence For Positive Reinforcement Training By Pippa Mattinson

The Right Steps Class Prerequisites & Class Details:

Behavior Modification Reinforcement and Rewards

SYTLE FORMAL : The Online Dog Trainer In-Depth Review

CLICK TO CALM: HEALING THE AGGRESSIVE DOG (KAREN PRYOR CLICKER BOOK) BY EMMA PARSONS

The Right Steps Class Prerequisites & Class Details:

Apple Training Series: AppleScript PDF

WCHS Volunteer Dog Walkers (10am 12pm, 7 days a week)

GARNET STATIC SHOCK BARK COLLAR

GARNET STATIC SHOCK BARK COLLAR

Professional Ultrasonic Dog Whistle Guide

1. Long Line Recall - See notes and videos on this.

Download The Puppy Training Handbook: How To Raise The Dog Of Your Dreams Ebooks For Free

Behavior Modification Why Punishment Should Be Avoided

MIND TO MIND the Art and Science of Training

Our K9 LLC 616 Corporate Way Valley Cottage New York GARNET STATIC SHOCK BARK COLLAR USERS GUIDE

K9K-914 Anti Bark Collar User's Manual. Introduction:

Tactical Control with the E-Collar

ANTI-DOG ENFORCEMENT - What Every Dog Owner Needs to Know

Dealing With Territorial and Protective Aggression

Effective Ways to Train a Dog

Leadership 101 By Marc Goldberg

Copyright 2015 Edmentum - All rights reserved.

CONTENTS. Communication It Is All About You!... 21

The Kikkuli Method Of Horse Training Ebooks Free

Loose Leash Walking. Core Rules Applied:

Basic Training Ideas for Your Foster Dog

Training To Help Your Grooming

Promote a Pet Cat Manual

Timing is Everything By Deborah Palman

Reminders: Goal: To claim God s promise to be with us and not forsake us. Permission to photocopy for local church use granted by Barefoot Ministries.

Generalization by George Hickox

I...am...Cheetah!: The Gift (Chapter Book For Kids 8-10) (The Wild Animal Kids Club) (Volume 1) Free Ebooks

Line Manners Part I. By Jim & Phyllis Dobbs and Alice Woodyard

Golden Rule Training. Desensitizing Your Dog to Specific Noises, Other Dogs and Situations

Lavin's Radiography For Veterinary Technicians PDF

BEGINNER I OBEDIENCE Week #1 Homework

100 Dog Training Tips

!"#$%&'()*&+,)-,)."#/')!,)0#/') 1/2)3&'45)."#+"/5%&6)7/,-,$,8)9::;:<;<=)>6+#-"?!

Biting, Nipping & Jumping Up

Walking Your Dog on a Loose Leash

POWER POSITIVE DOG TRAINING PDF

CREATURE COMFORT EVALUATION TO QUALIFY FOR PET THERAPY CERTIFICATION

House Breaking Methods

Research Clubs: Elephants, Penguins, and Frogs, Oh My! Grade 3: Nonfiction, Unit 4

Discover the Path to Life with Your Dog. Beginner Obedience Manual 512-THE-DOGS

If You Sailed On The Mayflower (If You...) PDF

Adopting a Dog Made Simple

The Choice is Yours. Peta Clarke

Presented By: WCHS Staff (509)

The length of time required for your dog to stop feeling anxious when left alone will depend on the severity of the issue, your dog s temperament,

Read & Download (PDF Kindle) The French Bulldog Handbook (Canine Handbooks)

TOMPKINS COUNTY SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS

Recall. Core Rules Applied

Read & Download (PDF Kindle) Dog Training: Ultimate Puppy Training For Happy, Obedient Dogs: Stop Bad Behaviors, Use Positive Reinforcement, And

Cani-Cross Badge Description, Training and Video Submission Information

Advanced Beginner 2 Agility Week 1 Goals for Advanced Beginner Agility class: ***Reinforcement builds behavior!

Conflict-Related Aggression

LIVING IN A MULTI- DOG HOUSEHOLD

Poison Dart Frogs (Complete Herp Care) Ebooks Free

Mental Development and Training

What kinds of dogs are best suited to these programs?

Lesson 4: Mock Trial: Jackson, Wyoming vs. Stone Fox

Tom Mitchell & Lauren Langman

LESSON 3 BE CONSISTENT

Step by step lead work training

How to have a well behaved dog

"Belgian Malinois Puppy Training Plan"

Teaching Eye Contact as a Default Behavior

Housetraining Drs. Foster & Smith Educational Staff

Frequently Asked Questions PREP SCHOOL: Crate Games

YAMNUSKA WOLFDOG SANCTUARY ADOPTION PACKAGE

8 Common Training Questions

Understanding your dog's behaviour will help you prevent and reduce behaviour problems.

Clicker training is training using a conditioned (secondary) reinforcer as an event marker.

Canine Questionnaire

Dog Evaluation Book PROJECT AGREEMENT

CANINE IQ TEST. Dogs tend to enjoy the tests since they don't know that they are being tested and merely think that you are playing with

Puppy Culture Essentials Playlist for Puppy Owners

Epub Books Goldie (The Puppy Place)

Oh Say Can You Say Di-no-saur?: All About Dinosaurs (Cat In The Hat's Learning Library) PDF

SUBNOVICE OBJECTIVES. Successful completion of this class means that the following objectives were obtained:

Training Your Retriever By James Lamb Free

Puppy Agility Games, Part 1 By Anne Stocum, photos by Dianne Spring

E-COLLAR. with Doug Roller

What does it mean? Increasing Dog Adoptability: Quick and Creative Canine Enrichment Tips. Physical Needs. Emotional Needs.

Rick Claggett. I was drafted into the Army out of Graduate School in at the age of 23.

Teaching Assessment Lessons

NEW VOLUNTEER GUIDELINES

Transcription:

Team Dog: How To Train Your Dog - The Navy SEAL Way PDF

New York Times best selling author and former Navy SEAL Mike Ritland teaches you how to give your dog the exceptional training and loyalty of a combat dog. In Team Dog, Mike taps into fifteen years' worth of experience and shares, in accessible and direct language, the science behind the importance of gaining a dog's trust. He also offers invaluable steps for achieving any level of obedience. His unique approach incorporates entertaining examples and anecdotes from his work with dogs on and off the battlefield and tips from the Navy SEAL guidebook to teach dog owners how to choose the perfect dog for their household, establish themselves as the "team leader," master "command and control," employ "situational awareness," and solidify their dog's position as the family's ultimate best friend. Team Dogintroduces pet owners everywhere to the new and distinctive authority on how to train your dog... the Navy SEAL way. Audible Audio Edition Listening Length: 5 hoursâ andâ 54 minutes Program Type: Audiobook Version: Unabridged Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc. Audible.com Release Date: January 29, 2015 Language: English ASIN: B00SLXPN1Y Best Sellers Rank: #10 inâ Books > Audible Audiobooks > Nonfiction > Lifestyle & Home > Animal Care & Pets #70 inâ Books > History > Military > Intelligence & Espionage #88 inâ Books > Crafts, Hobbies & Home > Pets & Animal Care > Dogs > Training Warning: I'm just a dog owner with a great interest in dog training. I'm not a book reviewer, I don't know Mike Ritland and I don't adhere to any dog training method or camp as though it were the gospel. I've read and been less than impressed with a lot of dog training books so my "meh" review/opinion isn't anything against the author or his methods, I just wasnã Â Â t blown away by the book. IÃ Â Â ve only had one cup of coffee so forgive the typos and other grammar issues.tl;dr Version: Mike uses a balance of training methods to include free shaping, corrections, spatial pressure and lots of positive reinforcement. The book doesnã Â Â t include a lot of specific training exercises, which leaves the reader wanting more in that regard. There is a fair bit of

information about things that arenã Â Â t training-related and those pages could have been better served in other ways. Not a bad book, but not going to blow your mind.first I'd like to thank Mike Ritland for his service to our country and for contributing to the public awareness of our Military Working Dogs (MWD). I would also like to commend him for writing a dog training book that isn't overly political, campy or one-sided just to please a specific audience of dog owners and trainers who only believe effective dog training is achieved by using Method-X. I often say there is no group of hobbyists and professionals that share a common interest yet hate one another more than those involved in dog training and sadly it has generated a lot of debate (to put it lightly) and not a lot of dialogue. I have no doubt Mike will receive ridicule and even death threats for some of the methods mentioned in this book because they aren't 100% hugs and kisses.the reason I'm only giving this book 3 stars is the subtitle of this book is "How to Train Your Dog the Navy SEAL Way" yet roughly 3/4 of the book isn't specifically training related. This is an extremely common theme in dog training books; there is a lot of theory, "what" and "why" but not a lot of "how". A brief example is many times throughout the book being "team leader" and building relationship with your dog is mentioned, yet very few specific examples on how a dog owner might improve that relationship are given. That is who is likely reading this book: people who want help in training their dog, not those who have perfect, well-adjusted, fully trained dogs. I have no doubt Mike knows what he needs to do specifically to achieve these goals, sadly a lot of that didn't make it in to the book. Those pages would have been better utilized by doing so.while Mike is balanced in his training approach yet focuses greatly on the positive reinforcement quadrant of Skinner's model, there are a few instances in the book where he doesn't explain the proper use of tools well and it comes across in a manner that could confuse the uninformed reader about the application of certain tools. One example is he mentions using humans to figure out an unknown exercise. First they use a remote collar (e-collar, electronic collar) to correct the person for getting it wrong and that leads to a shut down person who just doesn't attempt the exercise any more. Then they use positive reinforcement for "you're getting closer" shaping of the exercise and the person figures it out. No one has ever figured it out with the remote collar in his exercise. This is a common ammunition for the anti-remote crowd; "it leads to shut down dogs", and indeed it can when used improperly. The issue with this example is anyone that is trying to teach a NEW behavior that a dog has no understanding of with a remote collar is using the tool incorrectly and no quality remote collar user is training dogs that way. This anecdote only contributes to the misunderstanding of training tools and their uses, which goes back to the debate vs dialogue from earlier.mike is strong on using the least invasive methods for teaching behaviors and details free shaping behaviors rather well. Motivating the dog to do wanted behaviors

in a neutral yet leaning positive way is a great way to teach new behaviors. He also freely expresses the role of corrections in dog training whether it be a verbal "ah ah" or a leash correction if required. He also touches on the importance of not leaning on training tools (be it a prong collar, a head halter or a no-pull harness) to "fix" behaviors like pulling on walks. You're not fixing the behavior, you're leaning on a tool to stop the symptom. If your dog always pulls except with Device A, your dog still pulls.several pages are spent on diet, physical inspections of the dogs and à  œif you want to be like a SEALà   à   statements. Those pages would have been better used on addressing specific behavior issues or how to shape certain behaviors. After all, it is a dog training book.worth adding to the book shelf if you like MWD books or dog training books, but it isnã   t the holy grail a lot of dog owners and trainers have been looking for. I hope to see more books from Mike in the future, specifically focusing on training and training exercises in a more step-by-step manner. While Mike Ritland has presented a good generalized, but over-simplified, discussion of dogs, he is simply too late to the party. Everything discussed is a rehash of existing literature. As a primer for a novice dog handler, it gives a nice overview; but the title implies a greater level and depth of information that is simply absent for anyone who has already read one or more recent similar books on the subject. The book reminds me of the phrase "jack of all trades, but master of none." It touches on a wide range of topics related to care, handling, and training of K9s, but then fails to sufficiently delve into each specific subject matter. It also gives me pause because "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing," and here, he only gives the reader a little knowledge on each subject touched upon, giving the reader a false belief that they can easily duplicate his success; when, actually, there is much more involved that what he presented.the author acknowledged that he primarily uses operant conditioning and positive reinforcement; as discussed, respectively, by B.F. Skinner and Karen Pryor. I don't see how this author's rehashing of the well known principles and use of clicker training improves upon any of the numerous books written by Karen Pryor herself on the subject; and which, in fact, go into greater detail (both in theory and practical application); e.g. "Don't Shoot the Dog!: The New Art of Teaching and Training" or "Reaching the Animal Mind: Clicker Training and What It Teaches Us About All Animals." Books addressing K9 behaviors, such as "The Other End of the Leash: Why We Do What We Do Around Dogs" by Patricia B. McConnell, have been around for years. Discussion of sensory capabilities has been discussed in much greater detail in any one of the many books on K9 tracking and scent work. Similarly, discussions of nutrition, health, and wellness are far better addressed in "Pukka's Promise: The Quest for Longer-Lived Dogs" by Ted Kerasote.The book is fairly short, the margins wide, the pagination

spaced out, and it seems as though a much shorter (less detailed) book has been pulled out to 230 pages (yes, the book claims 256, but that would include the introduction, dedication, etc).i found repetitive dialogue, and dialogue that was, at times, contradictory. For instance, he suggests that in evaluating a shelter dog, one must not overwhelm the dog so as to give a false picture of his sociability; but then suggests that you present yourself to the dog in an authoritative manner and to take command. Well, if you are trying to get a true picture of the dog, the dog needs to get a true picture of you, since he will adjust his attitude to how you act towards him. Picture a dog with a sign above his head: "My temperament is based on who I am; my attitude is based on who you are." Presenting a dog candidate with a false impression of who you are gets an attitude based on it. Without going into detail, I also find fault with his methodology of selecting pups from breeders in that he generalizes too much. There are many well recognized puppy aptitude tests, which he fails to discuss; moreover, he failed to even mention the age of a puppy relative to testing and the developmental stages from puppy to adult.an example of another missed opportunity is where the author first says that: "...a healthy coat makes a dog more comfortable and less prone to skin complaints and problems with parasites." But then states: "I'm not going to spend time on how to care for a dog's coat." Basically, a dog's coat is really important (which is true), but I'm not going to address how to care for it. It's like most of the book: a little reference to something important and then a failure to follow through on the details; which also surprised me since he stated several times that the details are important to the "Navy Seal Way." Another lack of detail is when the author says that there are no BMI (body mass index) calculators for pets; but such calculators have been around for several years, such as the one at PetSci, which could have been found by the author in a quick search.it also troubles me that the author has taken modern dog training theories, which have been published in many other books for quite some time, slapped a US Navy Seal label on it, and offered it as a fresh approach. While the title of the book infers that some new, never discussed, method of dog training is now being made available to the ordinary dog owner (the "Navy Seal Way"), the truth is that all of the information offered has been presented before, in more detail, in other books. The best way I can characterize the book is that it resembles a Reader's Digest version of topics that has been written about elsewhere in greater detail. If you want all the information, you go to the main source, not the condensed version. It's not that I completely disliked the book, it's just that I failed to learn anything that I had not already read in other books; and, as a primer on dogs, it's a little pricey for such a short and quick read.so, do I recommend it? Well, if you have never read any of the more recent books on dog care, training & handling; and if you don't mind overpaying a bit, and you realize that after reading it you are not imbued with all the tools needed to care for or train a

working K9 or pet dog, then it's a fair starter book - but then again, so are many others. There is nothing unique about this book. If you have already read books on clicker training, dog care, and behaviors, then you will be disappointed.by "recent" theories I mean books in the past 5-10 years, because training theories have changed, drastically, from the now outdated "dominance" theories to one of trust and positive reinforcement; that is, forcing a dog's behavior is a far, far inferior training methodology than getting a dog to produce certain behaviors because it's a rewarding experience for that dog. I started this book on the day of its release, finished it in two days. It's a very easy read to those that have no dog training experience. My dog has made awesome improvements just in the 2 days since I've finished the book. I highly recommend it to anyone that has never trained a dog in their life. In a fascinating cross-over book, Ritland brings a whole different tone to the dog training world. RItalnd is no stranger to books; he authored a New York Times best seller Trident K9 Warriors. This book does much of what traditional training books do: it gives owners the tools to get their dog trained right. But the best part is Ritlandà   s perspective as a trainer of working and military service dogs. Ritland brings his experience as a dog trainer for the SEAL teams, the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Defense, TSA, & US Customs.Simply put, the book trains both the trainer and the dog to set the clear boundaries necessary to establish the owners role as the alpha while delving deep into the science of gaining a dogs trust, and teaches owners how to break tasks down into small steps for their dogs, so they can achieve great things. Throughout the book, the reader gets Ritlandà   s unique approach to training, with examples from Ritlandà   s work with dogs in the military. This training guide even has direct tips straight out of the Navy SEAL guidebook that can be applied to pets.dealing with dog choice, establishing the owner as team leader, and awareness of what their dogs need to be productive and compliant, the book is a great tool for any dog owner. Ritlandà   s book is a great addition for any trainer and owner. Team Dog: How to Train Your Dog - the Navy SEAL Way SEAL Team Six: Memoirs of an Elite Navy SEAL Sniper Seal Survival Guide: A Navy Seal's Secrets to Surviving Any Disaster Management: Take Charge of Your Team: Communication, Leadership, Coaching and Conflict Resolution (Team Management, Conflict Management, Team Building,... Team Motivation, Employee E) Fearless: The Undaunted Courage and Ultimate Sacrifice of Navy SEAL Team SIX

Operator Adam Brown Unbreakable: A Navy SEAL's Way of Life Dogs: Dog Care- Puppy Care- How To Take Care Of And Train Your Dog Or Puppy (Dog Care, Puppy Care, Dog Training, Puppy Training) How to Shoot Like a Navy SEAL: Combat Marksmanship Fundamentals Trident K9 Warriors: My Tale from the Training Ground to the Battlefield with Elite Navy SEAL Canines Brothers Forever: The Enduring Bond between a Marine and a Navy SEAL that Transcended Their Ultimate Sacrifice Among Heroes: A U.S. Navy SEAL's True Story of Friendship, Heroism, and the Ultimate Sacrifice Navy SEAL Sniper: An Intimate Look at the Sniper of the 21st Century The Heart and the Fist: The Education of a Humanitarian, the Making of a Navy SEAL Navy SEAL Shooting The Red Circle: My Life in the Navy SEAL Sniper Corps and How I Trained America's Deadliest Marksmen Worth Dying For: A Navy Seal's Call to a Nation Service: A Navy SEAL at War No Hero: The Evolution of a Navy SEAL Navy SEAL Dogs: My Tale of Training Canines for Combat No Easy Day: The Autobiography of a Navy Seal: The Firsthand Account of the Mission That Killed Osama Bin Laden