Yesterday, I took him out fairly late (8pm), although he had been out earlier. He seemed tired, and I no longer expect him to step up when I stick my hand in there. He DOES 99% of the time, but I’ve learned here that if he doesn’t, I quickly pull back and leave him alone, giving him a kind, understanding word, like, “Oh, okay. You’re not in the mood now.”
For the remaining 1% of the time, I just leave the door open and within 2 minutes, he’s dying to step up.
So last night, he’s on me. And I get into a good head rubbing sesssion. Like it doesn’t end. He never makes a single objectionable movement. 5 minutes become 10. So I start petting his back, something I’ve worked on in a very limited way. But yesterday?
He said, pet me all you want! He didn’t flinch an inch.
Now, I know he was tired, but I never heard that this could be a positive thing for training. So I started thinking he must be SICK, but his behavior today doesn’t indicate that at all.
So let’s see what happens when I go home now. If he lets me rub his back again, as Ed Norton said to Ralph Kramden:
“You have reached the next plateaux!”
For the remaining 1% of the time, I just leave the door open and within 2 minutes, he’s dying to step up.
So last night, he’s on me. And I get into a good head rubbing sesssion. Like it doesn’t end. He never makes a single objectionable movement. 5 minutes become 10. So I start petting his back, something I’ve worked on in a very limited way. But yesterday?
He said, pet me all you want! He didn’t flinch an inch.
Now, I know he was tired, but I never heard that this could be a positive thing for training. So I started thinking he must be SICK, but his behavior today doesn’t indicate that at all.
So let’s see what happens when I go home now. If he lets me rub his back again, as Ed Norton said to Ralph Kramden:
“You have reached the next plateaux!”