As a kid I had working dogs that stayed in the garden and house dogs, the working labs were couldn’t leave your side unless told to and the house dogs would sit still unless you told them two, 4 different dogs 2 different purposes equal amount of love
I have taught both. With every command the stay is implied, but I use the que when I know he will be waiting more than just a few seconds, or if I’m not planning on giving him a different command soon after. If we are working on recall or distance then the command is wait, because he is waiting for his next job. If he is in stay I will return to him
My Neo will stat until I'm about 4 feet from him then he just won't stay period he runs to me. I used to be able to walk across the street and have my German Shepard stay with no issue but with this Neo I'm thinking it'll never happen that way
We got our dog from a shelter in Eastern Europe when he was around 2 years old. He knew no commands and didn't seem to know his name. We managed to teach him several commands and tricks, but we cannot seem to teach him recall. We tried every trick in the book, but no luck. For some reason, he learned the 'stay' command within one training session and it's almost perfect. So I can let him off his leash and when I see someone approaching, I just tell him to stay and I go up to him to put him back on the leash.
The only exception is when we are out with the bicycle. If I need to put the leash back on, I can tell him to stay and when I stopped the bike and take the leash out, he comes up to me immediately and sits down right next to the bike so I can reach his harness. Don't know why that works, but we never trained him to do this.
I like the stay till I say otherwise and that works for me and my pups, but I've noticed some owners get distracted and literally don't release their dog from a sit! And then the dog releases himself, often without anybody caring but sometimes would require the dog sit longer. Very confusing, how's the dog supposed to know? So in that case, it would have been better for that owner to have used a stay command if they wanted the dog to stay, and if not, the dog knows he's free to get up if he'd like. The bit of inconsistency is really difficult when a trainer is trying to pass on the training of a dog to the owner :/
Thanks for this little information. Sally my mix hound and I work on this every day. If there's distractions around us, sit/stay command is a work in progress.
19 comments
As always, all words – no substance
I like down stay cause it seems like they stay better vs sit stay.
As a kid I had working dogs that stayed in the garden and house dogs, the working labs were couldn’t leave your side unless told to and the house dogs would sit still unless you told them two, 4 different dogs 2 different purposes equal amount of love
I have taught both. With every command the stay is implied, but I use the que when I know he will be waiting more than just a few seconds, or if I’m not planning on giving him a different command soon after. If we are working on recall or distance then the command is wait, because he is waiting for his next job. If he is in stay I will return to him
What a pointless video. You didn’t teach ‘How to’ do anything!
I’ve found this guy gives good advice but doesn’t really tell you how to put it into practice
Can’t stand this guy, he always says a whole lot of nothing
I teached my dog this but with treats
My dog is almost 8 and i teached this in under 30 minutes and im so proud
What a bait..
Cool so how do i do it
My Neo will stat until I'm about 4 feet from him then he just won't stay period he runs to me. I used to be able to walk across the street and have my German Shepard stay with no issue but with this Neo I'm thinking it'll never happen that way
We got our dog from a shelter in Eastern Europe when he was around 2 years old. He knew no commands and didn't seem to know his name. We managed to teach him several commands and tricks, but we cannot seem to teach him recall. We tried every trick in the book, but no luck. For some reason, he learned the 'stay' command within one training session and it's almost perfect. So I can let him off his leash and when I see someone approaching, I just tell him to stay and I go up to him to put him back on the leash.
The only exception is when we are out with the bicycle. If I need to put the leash back on, I can tell him to stay and when I stopped the bike and take the leash out, he comes up to me immediately and sits down right next to the bike so I can reach his harness. Don't know why that works, but we never trained him to do this.
❤
I like the stay till I say otherwise and that works for me and my pups, but I've noticed some owners get distracted and literally don't release their dog from a sit! And then the dog releases himself, often without anybody caring but sometimes would require the dog sit longer. Very confusing, how's the dog supposed to know? So in that case, it would have been better for that owner to have used a stay command if they wanted the dog to stay, and if not, the dog knows he's free to get up if he'd like. The bit of inconsistency is really difficult when a trainer is trying to pass on the training of a dog to the owner :/
Thanks so much for this precious content!
It is a controversial topic so what do you advise and how do you teach it?
Thanks for this little information. Sally my mix hound and I work on this every day. If there's distractions around us, sit/stay command is a work in progress.
This didn’t say “ HOW TO “ like the title states. 🤷🏻♀️
I’m super early