Every few steps give
it a small treat and praise for walking by your side.
When your puppy is finished, give
him a small treat and praise him with a pat so he knows he's done well.
Not exact matches
He'll naturally back up,
and then you can reward him with a
treat, such as
praise, a pat on the head, or a
small biscuit.
Wait until the dog becomes silent, then return
and give it a lot of
praise and a
small treat.
When your dog enters the crate in search of the toy, you must give your dog a lot of
praise and perhaps even a
small treat.
Carry
small puppy
treats in a waist pouch for easy access for
praising and rewarding during any puppy training sessions.
Remember to put the «red ball» downat the start of each episode, give
praise and a
small yummy
treat as a reward for being good,
and pick up
and put the «red ball» away at the end of each exercise.
When the dog actually sits down, give it a lot of
praise and a
small treat.
If he meets
and greets an unfamiliar dog on a walk
and behaves well, you should lavish
praise on him
and maybe even offer him a
small treat.
Begin by brushing only a
small area, then giving a
treat and lots of
praise.
Praise in a happy voice
and small treats are the best form of reward for good behavior.
To reinforce appropriate chewing, reward your dog for chewing on a toy with
praise and small training
treats each time he makes the right chewing choice.
And though the AKC recommends oversight when you tell a pug treated with small children, different groups praises the breed's» even tempers, humorous personalities, and their outgoing, loving dispositions.&raq
And though the AKC recommends oversight when you tell a pug
treated with
small children, different groups
praises the breed's» even tempers, humorous personalities,
and their outgoing, loving dispositions.&raq
and their outgoing, loving dispositions.»
When he does, go wild with your
praise,
and give him a
small handful of
treats!
It is much more productive to use petting,
praise and small pungent
treats to gain your cat's cooperation
and trust.
Always give her a
small treat on entering, combined with
praise,
and a big fuss on your return.
When he finishes eliminating outside, respond by giving him
praise and / or a
small treat to reinforce the behavior.
I tell people that they have to
treat even older dogs like young puppies that you are strictly potty training
and kind of start over with potty training - use a
small crate where she can not urinate in it
and then lay somewhere else, take her out every hour or so,
praise good behavior, only discourage bad behavior if you catch her in the act of going, limit her access to areas where she urinates, if someone isn't right with her at all times, she needs to be in her crate, etc..
Start by placing a
small amount of special pet toothpaste on your finger
and let your dog or cat smell
and lick the paste (do this several day in a row before introducing the brush
and follow with a
treat and lots of
praise each time)
If he behaves for one nail,
praise profusely, offer a
small treat,
and then try a second nail.
Offer words of
praise, a
small treat,
and plenty of petting
and cuddling.
Increase the
treat with much of
praise and a
small gift sometimes.
Your pup needs to meet many babies
and toddlers, so an adult should
treat /
praise the pup when holding or standing next to a
small child.
Your use of calm
praise and even a
small treat (not necessary but ok to do) is good.
Praise them when they go potty
and give them a
small treat for their action.
To encourage good behavior, you want to take all opportunities to
praise and reward with
small treats when the dog is playing well with others.
Rewards can include verbal
praise, a novel food
treat that she doesn't get any other time (almond slivers work well if your bird likes nuts, because they are
small and can be given a little at a time without overfeeding) or a scratch on the head (if your bird likes this kind of physical interaction, as many do).
It's best to start the training while the bird is young,
and it should always include lots of
praise and even
small treats, especially early on.
Small edible
treats work well; always accompany them with verbal
praise and positive body language.