Positive training doesn't mean letting your dog do anything. It means showing your dog what you expect, rewarding them when they get it right, and ignoring or redirecting unwanted behaviors. No fear, no pain, no force.
The four pillars
- Patience: a dog learns at their own pace, not ours
- Consistency: the same rule for everyone, everywhere, every time
- Reward: treats, play, petting depending on what motivates your dog
- Timing: the reward must follow the right behavior within a second
Recall: the most important command
A reliable recall can save your dog's life. The golden rule: never call your dog to punish them or to do something they hate. Otherwise they'll associate their name with negativity and stop coming.
Work on recall first indoors, then in the garden, then in calm outdoor settings, then in distracting environments. Step by step.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Punishing long after the behavior (the dog can't connect the dots)
- Lacking consistency between family members
- Confusing dominance and leadership: we guide, we don't subjugate
- Unintentionally rewarding unwanted behaviors (talking to them when they bark)
“A dog who obeys out of fear does the minimum. A dog who obeys out of desire gives their best.
— Estelle, dog trainer
When to consult a trainer
If after several weeks of work you see no progress, or if some behaviors are beyond you (aggression, severe anxiety, intense fears), a certified dog trainer can make all the difference. A few well-conducted sessions are worth more than months of unsuccessful attempts.