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<blockquote data-quote="r00s7a" data-source="post: 2240059" data-attributes="member: 9675"><p>Sit, heel, and here. Those three commands are the foundation for most everything else. Once you get those down, you can start all the other fun stuff, but you cannot start the fun stuff without getting those down. I do not mention stay, because there should be no need for that. When you tell a dog to sit, it means sit and remain there until given the release command. Get you a good book, read it cover to cover before you start training. Everyone has their favorites, I like The Working Retrievers by Tom Quinn, although it does get quite complex and in depth. That does not mean you have to train your dog to be a polished field trial dog, but that information is in there. Even better than reading a book, if you have someone that can train you first how to handle your dog, then you train your dog. I had a bud do that for me and it was invaluable.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="r00s7a, post: 2240059, member: 9675"] Sit, heel, and here. Those three commands are the foundation for most everything else. Once you get those down, you can start all the other fun stuff, but you cannot start the fun stuff without getting those down. I do not mention stay, because there should be no need for that. When you tell a dog to sit, it means sit and remain there until given the release command. Get you a good book, read it cover to cover before you start training. Everyone has their favorites, I like The Working Retrievers by Tom Quinn, although it does get quite complex and in depth. That does not mean you have to train your dog to be a polished field trial dog, but that information is in there. Even better than reading a book, if you have someone that can train you first how to handle your dog, then you train your dog. I had a bud do that for me and it was invaluable. [/QUOTE]
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