Not exact matches
Choose ONE
verbal cue, such as «Quiet», «Stop», «Enough», or «Silence», and teach all family members to use the
same word when they
command her to remain silent.
When teaching new and additional
commands, the sequence is always the
same — we follow the new (unknown)
command (the one we are trying to teach) by the old (known)
command, which serves as a
verbal lure to prompt the desired response.
As far as training goes, this means deaf dogs and hearing dogs are pretty much on the
same page: dogs that know
commands, whether visual or
verbal, are likely to be responsive to their adopters while dogs that know no
commands will simply not understand what you want.
When your pup starts to nip, give the
verbal command and at the
same time give the can a good shake or drop it next to puppy (not on him please).
Not unlike
verbal commands, the key is consistency, so once you develop a signal that you think will work for «Come» or «Down» or «Don't bark,» ALWAYS use the
same sign and the
same praise or acknowledgement.
• HSE diploma holder from an OSHA certified institute • Track record of reducing accident rate by 60 % during first two years of employment • Full
command on effective PPE designing usage and effective leverage of the
same • Vast experience in risk surveying, auditing and effective health and safety policy building • Excellent written and
verbal communication skills