Training Talk: What Age Should You Begin Training?

One of the questions I have heard a variety of answers to is, “What age should I begin training my pet?”

My answer is, “As soon as it arrives in your home.”

Now I have heard a variety of arguments on this topic–and the old school thought is that you should wait until the pet is between six months of age to over a year old.

Why would you want to wait so long?

In most cases, if you wait you also have to untrain bad behavior.

Now let me clarify…training young animals is vastly different from training older animals.

This is because young critters have very limited attention spans.

You also would not use any harsh types of training methods with them.

Everything shapes behavior so it is important to control the environment and teach animals the rules along with vocabulary from very early on.

Taking an animal into new environments, meeting new and different types of people, and exposing them to new experiences, and teaching them to think are all good efforts that benefit your pets.

Other important efforts beyond socializing your pet are to teach touch toleration and the acceptance of restraint.

In the past people waited to train because the popular belief was that the dog had to mature (usually six months) before they could focus for longer periods of time.

It was also thought that they would also be able to handle training that included tools such as choke chains.

Let me just say that harsh methods are a disservice at any age.

Another reason people delayed training was because they wanted pets to be fully immunized.

However, as I wrote about before, puppy socialization has been deemed as critical even if their inoculations are not yet completed since the benefits outweigh the risks.

At the very least you should get your pet into a puppy preschool or kitten kindergarten as soon as you can.

Now, training a young animal is vastly different from training an older one. I’ll get into this topic more indepth in the future…especially for those enrolled in the pet parenting school so make sure you don’t miss it.

Crufts Dog Show Still Raising Hackles

Last year there was a lot of discussion about the 2009 Crufts Dog Show after the airing of the special Pedigree Dogs Exposed which I posted here back in December of 2008 (a few months after it had aired).

Today The Independent published a pretty comprehensive summary of the issues surrounding Crufts.

From The Independent:

…In October, the RSPCA announced it would boycott Crufts 2009 because of its concerns for the welfare of certain dogs. The Pedigree pet-food company, makers of Chum, withdrew its sponsorship. Stung, the Kennel Club promised to review all 209 pedigree breeds in the UK to determine their susceptibility to disease, and publish its findings in 2009.

Unimpressed, the BBC threatened to pull the plug on its coverage of Crufts unless the Club agreed to ban certain “at-risk” breeds from being shown. They were: basset hounds, Clumber spaniels, Dogues de Bordeaux, mastiffs, Neapolitan mastiffs, pekes, bloodhounds, shar peis, St Bernards, chows, German shepherds, bulldogs and Rhodesian ridgebacks. Irving flatly refused, “as it would compromise both contractual obligations and our general responsibility to dog exhibitors and our audience”. The BBC retaliated by announcing, on 11 December, that they wouldn’t televise Crufts this year, even though their present contract runs to 2010.

Despite all the outcry, the 118th Crufts Dog Show will take place from March 5-8, 2009. About 28,000 dogs will attend and participate over those few days.

Because of the BBC boycot over televising the event, The Kennel Club has arranged for the show will be broadcast online via CruftsLive.Tv and the group has gone very web 2.0.

Even so, the media and public outcry looks like it will continue to haunt the show. Many purebred dog breeders are blaming The Kennel Club for the adverse publicity and the comments they get when they are out in public with their purebred animals.

An anti-cruelty demonstration will take place just outside of NEC, Birmingham, where the show is held.

The Kennel Club response? It is an event that is “Celebrating Happy, Healthy Dogs” but it seems that a lot of people don’t believe it.

What do you believe? Leave a comment below.