Calmness and Self-Control

How to teach your dog to be ‘polite’ around food in a few easy steps and prevent them from becoming a food thief.

Impulse control

By Scallywags

Susan Garrett teaches the “It’s Yer Choice” game of impulse control. It can be expanded to any training including obedience skills and agility skills. What fun!!

“It’s Yer Choice”

By Cindy Briggs


You can teach your dog to wait until released through a door with the cue of the door opening and you can also add a verbal cue. The benefit of the door opening being a cue to wait until released is a useful safety behavior, for example if you live on a busy street.

Teaching a default wait is in no means an excuse not to take the proper safety precautions, for example having a double gate if you live by a busy road or having your dog on leash when the door is open. No matter how bomb proof your dog’s behavior is, it’s just not worth the risk if something unexpected were to happen.

Door Manners for Dogs! – Dog Training

By Emily Larlham/Kikopup


This free dog training tutorial covers how to train a puppy or dog to go to his bed. The method is very simple and easy to follow. You can also use this tutorial to teach your dog to go to a training platform. Thank you for watching!

The EASIEST way to train your puppy to go to his bed – Dog training

By Emily Larlham/Kikopup

This video is a tutorial on how to teach your puppy or dog to be calm. Some dogs need help to learn how to relax. Calmness does not come naturally to some breeds .By reinforcing your dog for being calm, your dog will start to choose calmer behaviors in the future and actually enjoy being calm. Tips for teaching a Default Settle: Don’t drop treats if the dog looks up at your hand as you move to give the dog the treat, instead try again later. Don’t cue the dog “down”. It works better if the dog figures it out on his own and CHOOSES to lay down. Use high value treats like real meat or cheese for such a wonderful behavior.

Capturing Calmness- how to train calmness in dogs

By Emily Larlham/Kikopup


How to teach a puppy or adult dog the leave it cue using Positive Reinforcement.

Below are the 4 Steps that are covered in the video.

Step 1
Put extremely low value food down on the ground. Move far enough away that your dog can easily look away from the food and back at you. Mark and feed your dog for choosing to look away from the food. If your dog doesn’t think to look away from the food on his own you can use an attention noise. If he still can’t look away from it, it means the distraction is too hard. If this happens use a lower value distraction or create distance from the distraction. When your dog looks away from the distraction you can mark and reinforce multiple times. This will make it less likely for the dog to feel like he needs to keep looking at the distraction and will make it easier to add duration to the leave it cue.

Step 2
Change things up. Move the location of the distraction, use a different distraction and approach and pass it from different angles.

Step 3
Add the cue Once your dog is looking away from the distraction within 3 seconds you can add your cue. Move the distraction or change your location to get the dog to notice the distraction again. Then say your cue ‘leave it’. Mark and reinforce your dog for turning back toward you. If the dog doesn’t look away from the distraction, stop saying your cue until the behavior is reliably happening within 3 seconds. This will help create a cue that the dog responds to promptly after you say it.

Step 4
Continue to generalize the behavior and add criteria. If the dog goes for the distraction more than 3 times in a row it means the criteria is too high and the training will not be as affective as if you break up the steps into smaller approximations, such as working from further away or using an easier distraction. When the dog is off leash for the first time, go back to using the easiest distraction. You could allow the dog to get the distraction on a release cue such as “Get it”, however if you do this it can lead to the dog anticipating being released as well as getting more excited during the training process because of the fast movement of going for the food. I suggest not to do this during initial training. If you want to give the dog the distraction, pick it up and hand it to him.

Some ideas for generalizing the behavior:

  • Turn away from the distraction and come back to you
  • Walk past the distraction with you
  • Walk around the distraction with you
  • Call the dog past the distraction to you
Train your dog or puppy Leave It

By Emily Larlham/Kikopup