A Puppy Training Camp Boulder CO Professional Trainers Run Can Be A Great Option

By Jeffrey Foster


When you first bring a new puppy home, everyone loves his engaging personality and winsome looks. It doesn't take long though for the constant barking, resistance to toilet training, and destruction of brand new shoes turns him into the family menace. Around this time, you will either decide to train the animal yourself, enroll both of you in classes, or call a puppy training camp Boulder CO canine lovers have recommended.

Puppies don't stay little long, and teaching them manners early is best. If you're considering sending the pup off to a camp in the local area, you must choose carefully. You have to find out what techniques they use to train puppies, how many weeks puppies are boarded, and what the cost is. You also need to know just what the puppies learn during the time they're away and in the hands of strangers.

All camps teach puppies the basics. They learn commands like coming when called, stopping and waiting, sitting, getting down, and walking on a leash without pulling at it. Your pup will learn all the doggy etiquette necessary to make him a valued member of your family and a pleasure to be around. If English is not your first language there are camps that can accommodate you by teaching commands in French, Spanish, German, Dutch, and perhaps other languages.

One of the benefits of enrolling puppies in camps is the socialization they get at an early age. They are put in groups and allowed to play together with supervision. This teaches them how to act around other dogs and how to take direction from humans in this situation. Puppies who exhibit negative behaviors around humans and other dogs will be enrolled in specific drills in order to curb any negative tendencies.

How they should behave in public is one thing puppies learn. It's wonderful when puppies behave well at home. Like little kids though, at some point you will find yourself in public, which will test whether their manners will hold in unfamiliar surroundings.

To accomplish this, the staff takes the puppies on field trips. This give the pups a chance to interact with strangers and to adjust to crowds and unfamiliar smells and noises. The experiences increase the puppies' confidence in themselves.

Puppies get lots of physical activity at the camps. Whatever facility you decide to go with should offer plenty of daily exercise opportunities for the canine students. There are camps where trainers put puppies through strength and cardio training routines.

Some camps teach pups to use treadmills. This is a great idea for owners who like to work out in their own homes. They don't have to worry about walking their dogs in the rain or snow as long as a treadmill is available.

Most camps accept puppies once they reach the age of 3 months. They will accept dogs up to the age of six months in their puppy camps. Most camps do not teach young dogs any behaviors designed to protect or guard owners. Instead they concentrate on teaching puppies etiquette and obedience.




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