Padfoot Treats: Lick Mats

Padfoot loves lick mats. While you can puree things like chicken broth, pumpkin, green beans and carrots to smear on the mats and freeze, it’s dead easy to smear on peanut butter—Padfoot’s absolute favorite—and stud it with small treats and freeze it. I have 2 silicone mats I keep in the freezer for when I need them. I punctured a hole and slid a carabiner through so I can clip it to the inside of his crate (Padfoot is not the instrument of mass destruction that Gypsy was, so I don’t worry about him chewing it up). The only thing I don’t like is the textured surface makes them a pain to clean. 

CARE makes lick mats with frisbees and carabiners, smearing the concave side with the goodies and hanging them on the outside of dog kennels, facing in. The dogs have to work a bit and there’s no danger of an unsupervised dog chewing up the frisbee and choking on plastic. These are also much easier to clean.

Gear

Me and Padfoot at Arlington Cemetery, where dog walkers are welcome.

Recently Desiree and I switched our Sunday morning walk from Wesleyan  to Arlington Cemetery, which is much larger and welcomes dogs. Desiree (and Felix and Padfoot) and I easily log more than 3 miles there, more than twice our distance at Wesleyan.

Padfoot has graduated from his prong collar to a martingale for our usual walks, but he’s still reactive in strange environments. Here he’s wearing a light-weight prong collar and a harness with a honking big handle on the back.

I’m not crazy about prong collars. In Padfoot’s case, he self corrects with the prong collar and is a great loose leash walker unless he’s triggered. I tried the Halti head collar—which I prefer to the Gentle Leader—but he hated it and kept biting the chin strap apart (easily replaced with cotton twill tape). I switched to the Martingale after training at CARE to handle their reactive dogs. I trust them since they handle thousands of dogs a year. They fit all their dogs with Martingales. I feel more comfortable delivering a quick correction with the Martingale than with any other kind of collar. 

In the photo I’m using the padded Halti double ended training lead. It’s designed so you can clip one end to a collar and the other end to a harness, giving you excellent control. It has rings in it so you can clip one end to make a traditional leash handle, or you can wrap it around your waist to walk hands-free. I love that it’s padded all along the length. It makes it much more comfortable to grip it at any point, necessary when you need to gain control of a lunging dog. 

I’m wearing the dog walk belt I created when I started volunteering at CARE. The belt has a roomy Cincinnati Library fanny pack on the left, where I keep a spare roll of poop bags, an ultra-sonic corrector, a can of compressed air pet corrector, and a mini air horn—which CARE dog walkers carry to call for help if they run into trouble (in my year volunteering I’ve never heard one go off). CARE also recommends shaker cans, small containers with an assorment of nuts, bolts, washers, or coins, anything that will make an obnoxious rattle.

In the center you can see a poop bag dispenser. What you can’t see is the Dalzom poop bag holder, which is a plastic device designed to hold your filled bags until you find a trash can. The red pouch on the right is for treats. For those of us who remember the original Batgirl, This setup reminds me of Barbara Gordon’s utility belt. 

I’m carrying a water pistol in my pocket, which grabs Padfoot’s attention better than all the other aversives in my arsenal. The trick with aversives is recognizing trigger situations early enough to have them in hand when you need them. Happily, I need them less and less.

If you’re wondering, my clothes are so baggy because I bought them before I lost 100 pounds on the Keto diet (another story for another time). I enjoy loose clothes so I still wear them.

Padfoot: First Steps

Have you ever looked at those lists of dog breeds, the ones that tell you the which breeds have the most of certain characteristics? It you look at lists for “most intelligent,” “most loyal,” and “most willful/independent/stubborn” you’ll see the same breeds. And most of those breeds ended up in Padfoot’s DNA. 

Please note: anything I say about dogs and dog training is my opinion, based of thirty years with street urchins I have loved. I don’t claim to be a master dog trainer. Anyway, in my experience, the more intelligent a dog is, the less “do it because I say so” will work once they reach adolescence. And the smarter a dog is, the more they are likely to rebel at dominance oriented training and the more you need to build respect. 

Think about every movie you’ve ever seen where the well-meaning do-gooder attempts to help the kid living on the streets. The kid doesn’t trust anyone but himself, lacks discipline, and has little appreciation for structure. If you want to address reactivity, jumpiness, mouthiness and pretty much anything else, it’s essential to get them to accept your leadership. Getting there requires baby steps. 

Core to teaching your dog to control their impulses are Sit, Down, and Stay. Use plenty of praise and treats in a quiet setting with no distractions. (Padfoot picked up Sit in about 5 seconds. Down requires submission and was much harder for him. Stay was impossible. I would tell him to “Stay,” and he thought it meant “Dance.” I gave up and started over with “Freeze,” and that works for us.)

Once they have mastered these commands and understand that good things happen when they listen to you, start using them in your daily routine. Ask them to Sit at the door before you open it, or when friends approach (getting in front of their impulse so they don’t jump). Tell them to Stay while you set their dinner down several feet away, and pick the bowl up if they move before you release them (don’t make them wait too long. 10 seconds is enough to get the point across). 

The more they want what is on the other side (getting to go outside, getting to eat, etc.) the more motivated they will be to listen to you. And the more they listen to you, the more they will listen to you when they encounter distractions or triggers. Progress is only ever by degrees. It’s often one step forward and two back, so mark and celebrate all the tiny wins.

I know this sounds very remedial, and it is. It’s also the path of least resistance to building trust, and it’s so easy to forget basics when you are dealing with the chaos an undisciplined dog creates.

I mentioned my arsenal of aversives earlier, and they are another important tool. I’ll talk more about them next month.