Dog target training may not be something that you’ve thought about when thinking about training your dog, but there are some great benefits to adding this to your dog’s training repertoire.
It is the starting point for all kinds of cool tricks – and it also has some really useful applications for improving behaviours such as walking on a loose lead, recall, and focus. It can also give your dog something easy to do to distract them from other things that may be going on around them.
Target stick dog training is a great technique to teach your dog, but what exactly is it and how do you begin to train your dog with this method? In this article, we explore all the questions you may have about target training and the benefits.
What is dog target training?
Target training takes in a wide range of behaviours where you teach your dog to react to objects in a certain way. Most commonly, target training is about your dog touching their nose to an item you place in their environment.
This could be your hand, a ball on the end of a stick, a plastic lid taped to a wall or a door – and this object could be close to them or at a distance.
Once your dog becomes an expert at this, you can introduce other objects and other ways of behaving. This could be ‘go to a mat and lie down on it’ – or it could be ‘putyour paw on something’, or ‘rest your chin on something’. Suddenly you have a whole range of new behaviours you can teach your dog to deepen your relationship and have more fun together.
You can see why dog target training is so popular: it gives you the skills to teach your dog new things and gets them to use their brain and concentration skills. It can build confidence as you can teach them to go away from you to touch an object and so be happy working further away from you. It can also be very useful if you want to train them to close doors, tidy up their toys or shut the refrigerator!
Target training – specifically getting a dog to touch your hand with their nose – can be one of the very best ways of giving a dog who is worried about touch or doesn’t know that your hands are a good thing, a way to discover that your hand is safe and rewarding. You are training them that they are in control of how they approach and touch your hand, and that instigating that contact is rewarding. Dogs who have come from an uncertain background or who are new rescues, have no idea that you are a safe person or that touch from you is a good thing. This is a great way to teach them that and build their confidence and your relationship.
How do you start target training?
To start target training, all you need is some really tasty treats that you know your dog loves. If you use a clicker for your training, this is an easy exercise to clicker train but if not, have a marker word that you will always use to reward your dog and to signal “well done, a treat is on its way”. It doesn’t matter what word you choose, as long as it is one you can say in an upbeat enthusiastic way! If your dog is nervous or worried, a clicker can sometimes just be too loud, and a word is better. If your dog is more confident or already clicker-wise, then it is entirely your preference.
Once your dog is reliably doing this, you can start to move your hand around so they follow it for a few steps before you let them touch it and get their treat. You can start to do this with either hand, when you are moving, or even at different heights.
You can start to do this in lots of different places and at lots of different times.