Nate Schoemer provides an academy for dogs and their owners. The purpose of dog training is to enhance human/canine relationships and to help a dog to understand its expectations. Through training your canine, discover the dramatic difference of owning a well-trained, obedient dog.
Dog training is an art form and it takes years to become an expert. However, through the essentials I’ve provided in these training videos, anybody can take their dog ownership to the next level. Although you won’t master this field overnight, you can quickly develop the essential skills needed to fix the majority of issues that dog owners face. In addition, you’ll discover a greater relationship with your dog, as you now have the tools to address the bad behaviors that may have frustrated you or pushed you further away from your companion. I believe that improving the lives of dogs, along with their owners, is the most important thing. We’ll talk soon!
I started watching this out of curiosity and as a joke because i kinda want my dog to detect weed and i wanna bust my friends as a joke, but i stayed for the dog training knowledge. You can never know too much. Thanks! You seem very very knowledgeable, have any tips for a 7 month old swiss white shepherd rescue? Not a first timer, but his super stubborn and hyperfocused nature is completely new to me
Thank You Nate for making these training videos I have a 10 week old GSD that is very bold Your training method will be a great help with him I’m going to give it my best effort I can’t believe these videos are free I have viewed many different trainer’s videos Nate you are at the top of the group 👍
I think I'll keep that rewind trick in mind. Echo's smart and that's something she could do. It was pretty easy teaching her to spin around a touch pad using those same head twist maneuvers, but instead of me rotating with her, it would be the same, just me standing still.
The only change in rebound would be I'd use a wall versus the round pole as a wall would provide more stability for the place board. I've seen several of Maureen's videos and she's pretty amazing. She should have her own channel. And like the female racecar driver Danica Patrick, she could also branch out into modeling easily. Big smile, bright eyes, and such a fun and perky personality. Danica Patrick had an amazing complement she found fun and awesome. she was doing a bathing suit photo shoot and she heard two guys say what a gorgeous model she was, and had no clue she was there for being a famous racecar driver.
I backpacked many countries in europe and beyond, often walking streets, gravel roads. Both day and night. One of the most annoying things happening many places is bored dogs barking at you from 400 to 100 yards away, then setting off the whole village filled with other bored dogs.. especially bad in greece. I think its such a waste of resource. People dont assume responsibility for thir dogs, just feed them and think they done a good job. Its like eating leaves and tossing away he strawberries.. in contrast i encountered a police dog at the mexican border last year that was chasing me for almost an hour through the bamboo, he followed my scent trail, when he had finally found me he didnt bark but quietly sat down next to me and waited for the operator, who was just 20 feet behind.. he was exceptionally trained, a german sheperd.. the dogs in greece are mostly the same race, they look similar to a golden retriever. There are also strays in greece, they also bark at you for seemingly no reason. I think some dogs are just bored and dont wanna act intelligent cause nobody demands it. Just like with most humans you meet while travelling.
My only concern is what I do when I have to go to work? We would all love to have all the time in the world with our dogs, but vacation days are not endless and after a week or maybe two if one is lucky, you have to go back to work and leave the puppy alone for 8 hours (of course if you are always out of home for 8 hours you shouldn’t have a dog, but for example I work from home 3 days out of 5, so the problem stands just for 2 days)
@@carriemckay2582 You can find it here. Thanks for watching and commenting. 😀 sitstaylearn.com/collections/instructional-videos/products/from-novice-to-pro-the-ultimate-guide-to-dog-training-by-nate-schoemer?variant=50148621582625
Thanks so much for these great videos, they are so helpful and clear! I have two questions for you. After the dog has a perfect stay with distractions, how do I teach her to do the stay without the platform? My puppy is amazing with the stay, first she learned indoors and now she is great in a parking lot. What is the next step? Doing it without the platform or going to a park and train with the platform? Thanks for all the work you do and share!!!
Wait! Oh no. Ive only ever know about the duration marker, terminate marker, and incorrect. For duration I use good, for terminate I use YES , and fir incorrect I use NO. Is duration the same as continuation? Some help please :)
@@NateSchoemer hi! Thanks for such a swift response. I felt a little silly after asking, but im trying my hardest to learn and learn and learn for my dog. Thanks again
How come you disagree with Tom Rose about training for correctness first and attitude later? According to Tom, you get more precision with less stress if you start precision training early. He seems to think it’s more effective to train for correctness first and attitude later. Otherwise, you end up fixing problems later which cause more stress during the fixing process than you would by insisting on correctness in the first place. You being a graduate from Tom Rose, I have to know why would you disagree with precision first?
I'm from Texas we handle it differently here. My neighbors dog was attacked, he Warned the woman he was about to put her dog down. If she didn't get him off.. she did nothing and now she has no dog
I really appreciate all the work you’ve put into these videos. I do want to push back against the idea that shelters and rescues only exist because of bad breeders. The majority of dogs that end up in shelters are owner surrenders (this happens for lots of reasons, but often comes down to the fact that the owner just wasn’t prepared for the commitment that getting a dog is), accidental litters from people who don’t spay/neuter their dogs, and strays. I foster for a local rescue and can say definitively that there are tons of fantastic dogs available for adoption. You’re entitled to your opinion, but please don’t use your platform to give people the idea that only damaged dogs with bad genetics come from shelters.