Pet tricks: good and good for you

Pat, at Doggiewoggie.com, found an article on Kentucky.com (reprint from Newsday) about teaching your dog or cat to do tricks.

If you’ve read up on dog training, you’ve probably heard the new adage “a tired dog is a good dog.” And it’s certainly true that if you find a way to burn off some of your dog’s energy, he’s less likely to get into serious mischief. (Especially with a puppy. Phew!)

But some trainers today argue that how you tire out a dog is also important. Prolonged, hard physical stimulation — such as a frenetic afternoon in a dog park — may actually raise levels of a dog’s stress hormones, with potentially negative consequences for his behavior and ability to learn (not to mention his health).

Instead, you should find activities that combine more gentle physical activity with engaging mental work — like teaching your dog to do tricks.

Teaching your dog tricks may have other benefits as well, such as helping her learn how to learn, and to look to you for reinforcement.

There are a number of books on teaching tricks. Although it’s a general dog training book, Outwitting Dogs, the book I co-wrote, has a section on tricks. Many trainers offer tricks classes. Here in Rochester, for instance, Cindy Harrison offers a great tricks class.

Which brings me to the last point about working on tricks. It’s fun! We can sometimes get overly serious with dog training, but with tricks, it’s easy to just chill out and enjoy our dogs. Hey, who knows, maybe we even become better trainers in the process ;-)

UPDATE: please also take a peek at my new book, 101 Dog Training Tips.

I swear I don’t know this person

Stopped by Amazon this morning, and someone has posted a new review for Outwitting Dogs.

A week or so ago, the subject of Amazon reviews came up on a Yahoo list I’m on, and someone said that they generally ignore 5-star reviews. The reasoning is that no book is perfect, and if someone says so, they have to be a friend of the writer. A shill.

Well, I do not know this person. Maybe she knows Terry (the book is a collaboration; Terry Ryan, my co-writer, is a professional dog trainer) but the book’s been out for a year and as far as I know Terry hasn’t asked anybody to post an Amazon review for her. (I haven’t either. Call me a wimp but I’m descended from a long line of Methodist ministers. Somehow I just can’t get the words “would you fake a nice Amazon review for me?” out of my mouth. And my day job is PR. I should be cynical and conniving. Thanks a lot, Grandpa, wherever you are.)

So anyway, I’m reading the review, and maybe I’m a little short of sleep, but it made me teary. This person loved the book. Really really loved it. The writing, the organization, the content, the attitude . . .

It was a nice, warm, pat on the back and I am deeply grateful for it. So citywulf, wherever you are, thank you. Thank you so much.

I’m going to go write some more, now.

Book Reviews

I’m sure I’m not the only writer out there who has had this experience: your first book is published. You google the title. You get a lot of hits and at first that’s a bit of a thrill, until you realize that 99.99999999 percent of them are the result of keywords being auto-harvested by websites hoping to tap into Amazon affiliate dollars.

Over time, your book does get mentioned by a few actual human beings (Outwitting Dogs gets a hat tip here and here, for instance) but these are the exception, not the rule. So the question is: where are the virtual book reviewers? (I’m deliberately excluding Amazon’s reader review system, if for no other reason than that the reviews don’t come up on search engines.)

I know from experience, having been involved in DYI book publicity for two titles now, that sending review copies to mainstream media can be an exercise in futility. The venue is too finite. If you don’t happen to hit a reporter for whom your concept clicks, whether for personal reasons or because he/she “gets” why your concept is topical, then you are sunk.

What we need are more reviewers.

I’ll do my part by posting an occasional review here. Updates to follow.