Skill Level: Beginner
Length: 14 Modules
Access Period: Unlimited
Price: $65.00
64 Instructor Content Videos
29 Student Work Videos
Teaching our dog a reliable recall is the most important behavior we can teach our dog. The recall is a behavior that can save our dog's life. This course has 93 videos and is over 6 hours long. If you have a recall problem and want to take the time to learn how to train a reliable recall this course will teach you how to do it.
It needs to be said that the recall is not a behavior that you are going to train in 2 weeks, probably not even in 2 months. Every Youtube video that claims "TEACH YOUR DOG TO COME IN 5 EASY STEPS" is 100% a scam. People who make these claims cannot teach you how to train the recall in a 10 minute YouTube video. They are only interested in getting you to click on their video so that YouTube will pay them for your click. This is called "click-baiting". These people are not professional dog trainers, they don't deserve your time or your respect. I have them in the same category as people who make "robocalls".
“You can have a dog that won’t sit, it won't down, it won't stay when asked, but you cannot have a dog that will not come when called”.
There are only three reasons dogs will not come when called:
1- The dog has not generalized the COME command. Meaning the dog has not learned it must come in every circumstance.
2- The dog won't come because it is faced with distractions it has not yet learned to ignore.
3- The dog will not come because it's afraid, which means the dog may have been called in the past and when it got to the owner, it was punished for doing something wrong.
This course will help you with the first two reasons for not coming when called (generalization and distractions) The third is on you. Getting mad at your dog and calling it to you so you can correct it for something you know it shouldn't be doing is dead wrong and will always foul a recall and hurt your bond with your dog.
Whether you are training a family companion, a police service K-9, a Search & Rescue Dog, or a competition sport dog they all must come when they are called. By the end of their training program they must learn that should they refuse to come when called they will suffer serious consequences. The level of those consequences varies greatly. They are based on the age of the dog, the temperament of the dog, the level of training the dog has had and what was going on when we asked the dog to come. The relationship of the dog and handler will also play into this. We cover these in our course.
Our goal is this system is to end up with a dog that doesn't have to think about coming when called, it just reflexively turns and comes when asked. That will only happen with a trainer who takes the time to go through a training program in a step-by-step fashion without skipping steps.
This training course outlines in a simple step-by-step manner the road to generalization in recalls. It is both simple and fun for you and your dog. In the end, you will have a dog who enjoys the work. The foundation of our work is based on reward-based methods (i.e. markers or clickers). We split the recall exercise into small steps and teach these simple behaviors motivationally. Throughout this work, we build our communication system.
As the dog learns these small behaviors we gradually introduce distractions to some (not all) of the short behaviors. Our training sessions begin in sterile locations the dog feels comfortable in. We gradually introduce distractions into those controlled environments. Our feeling is that if our dog can't function and follow instructions in a location it's comfortable in, how can we expect it to comply out in the world with god knows what is going on?
If you are considering purchasing this course, I can tell you there isn’t an online course anywhere that has broken down recall training steps I like I have. To get a better feel for this, I recommend you look below at the course outline, it's detailed. That is why the course has 6 hours of video combined with enough documentation to print a small book.
It’s important to set realistic expectations with yourself concerning the time it takes to achieve a reliable recall. It's not going to happen in a few weeks. It is disturbing to see YouTube videos claiming otherwise. Oh, there are people out there who will use remote collars at high levels of stimulation that will force dogs to come when called. But this is going to destroy our relationship and bond with our dog.
In Module 11 of our course, we dealt with the subject of adding pressure on a dog for refusing to come when we 100% knew the dog had generalized the command. We will explain how to approach that subject for your dog.
Every dog is different. What kind of pressure we apply depends on the following:
1- The age of the dog
2- The training of the dog has had
3- The temperament of the dog
4- What kind of distractions the dog is facing at the moment it refused to come
5- The skill level of the handler
In closing some trainers will say that every dog needs to be finished with a remote collar. We respectfully disagree with that approach. We would say "Some dogs need to be finished with a remote collar"."
We have 4 dogs in our home, 2 wear remote collars every day, 1 has gone through collar conditions and no longer needs to wear it and one will never need a remote collar.
I have an excellent course titled REMOTE COLLAR TRAINING FOR THE PET OWNER. I bought my first remote back in 1978, and know exactly how to train with them.
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"This was a fantastic class.
Every module showed me new and fun ways to play games with my dog that are actually building a behavior that I want.
We are playing, having fun, and he is LEARNING! He is learning that being with me is the best place to be. It is a challenge sometimes for me to get the timing right because it makes me so happy to see him learning that I get ahead of myself.
Fortunately, since I now know that SHORT sessions are best, I can keep the mistakes to a minimum and reset for next time.Our favorite right now is the food chase games. He is so food motivated.
Today we got to do the call away exercises with a friend and he learned VERY quickly when she stopped interacting and I called him. She lured him over and over, and each time I was able to call him away. We were both amazed at how quickly it clicked for him and effective this is.
Thank you so much for putting so much time and energy and KNOWLEDGE into all these courses. I am hooked. On to the Marker Training 2024 class next, then Basic Obedience, Intermediate Obedience."
TARGET AUDIENCE
Family Pet Owners
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
None
MODULE 1: The most important command to ever teach your dog
SEGMENT 1: A Note From Ed
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: Realistic Expectations
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: Why doesn't your dog like coming when you call? What's wrong?
No summary available
SEGMENT 4: Training Steps for a RECALL
No summary available
SEGMENT 5: Terms We Use in Our Course
No summary available
SEGMENT 6: Where should you train?
No summary available
SEGMENT 7: When to go off-leash
No summary available
MODULE 2: Equipment
SEGMENT 1: Choosing the Right Training Equipment
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: Conditioning to Your Training Equipment
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: Leashes and Harnesses
No summary available
SEGMENT 4: Who needs a Bait Bag - You Do!
No summary available
MODULE 3: Reward delivery
SEGMENT 1: Why We Use Food Rewards
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: What are High-Value Food Rewards
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: Reward Delivery is Important
No summary available
MODULE 4: Training a Finish to the Recall
SEGMENT 1: Training a Finish
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: Collar Grab
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: Training the Place Command
No summary available
MODULE 5: The Name Game
SEGMENT 1: The NAME Game
No summary available
MODULE 6: Food Chase Games
SEGMENT 1: Food Chase Games
No summary available
MODULE 7: Restrained Recalls
SEGMENT 1: What is a Restrained Recall?
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: Practice Your Footwork
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: Recall with an Assistant
No summary available
SEGMENT 4: Restrained recalls alone - without a helper
No summary available
SEGMENT 5: Working on a REFLEXIVE Recall
No summary available
SEGMENT 6: Adding a Whistle Recall
No summary available
SEGMENT 7: Student Videos
No summary available
MODULE 8: Impulse Control using Touch Pads
SEGMENT 1: Why We Use Touch Pads or Platforms
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: Adding Duration
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: Student Videos
No summary available
MODULE 9: Call Aways Exercises
SEGMENT 1: Call Aways - Introducing Distractions
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: Student Videos
No summary available
MODULE 10: Call Back Exercises Build Reflexive Recalls
SEGMENT 1: Building A Reflexive Recalls
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: Call-Back Exercises with Cindy
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: If you use Reward Based Marker Training
No summary available
SEGMENT 4: Student Videos
No summary available
MODULE 11: Adding Pressure
SEGMENT 1: Things to consider before adding pressure
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: Tools for Adding Pressure
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: Your Decision to Use a Remote Collar
No summary available
MODULE 12: When to Stop Using Food Rewards
SEGMENT 1: When to Stop Using Food and Toy Rewards
No summary available
MODULE 13: Q&As on RECALL
SEGMENT 1: The most common recall question we get - WHEN CAN WE TAKE OUR DOG OFF-LEASH?
No summary available
SEGMENT 2: My puppy won't come to me when I play with him in the yard.
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: My dog doesn't sit straight when I call him
No summary available
SEGMENT 4: Dog only comes to me when she has a long line on
No summary available
SEGMENT 5: My dog comes really slowly when recalled
No summary available
SEGMENT 6: Our Puppy Ignores Our Recall Command
No summary available
MODULE 14: Where to go from here?
SEGMENT 1: The Power of Training Dogs with Markers
Updated Version 2024
SEGMENT 2: Training Dogs with Food Rewards
No summary available
SEGMENT 3: Basic Dog Obedience
Version 2018
SEGMENT 4: Intermediate Dog Training
No summary available
SEGMENT 5: Remote Collar Training
No summary available
SEGMENT 6: Ask Cindy
No summary available
SEGMENT 7: ** Certificate of Completion **
No summary available
"This was a fantastic class. Every module showed me new and fun ways to play games with my dog that are actually building a behavior that I want. We are playing, having fun, and he is LEARNING! He is learning that being with mom is the best place to be. It is a challenge sometimes for me to get the timing right because it makes me so happy to see him learning that I get ahead of myself. Fortunately, since I now know that SHORT sessions are best, I can keep the mistakes to a minimum and reset for next time.
Our favorite right now is the food chase games. He is so food motivated. And today we got to do the call away exercises with a friend and he learned VERY quickly when she stopped interacting and I called him. She lured him over and over, and each time I was able to call him away. We were both amazed at how quickly it clicked for him and effective this is.
Thank you so much for putting so much time and energy and KNOWLEDGE into all these courses. I am hooked. On to the Marker Training 2024 class next, then Basic Obedience, Intermediate Obedience."
- Page B. on 01/19/2024
"It’s hard to express the most important aspect of balanced dog training I have learned from the course as all that has been taught has been super important. But if I was to single out a few key points that I have learned from the course it is the importance of balanced training and food rewards with games and training. I have my dog trained on a e-collar for recall but always felt there was more to it then just using the e-collar for recall. The games/training videos using rewards/food has been a real eye opener for me and I am looking forward to using and implementing this training to further progress my relationship with my dog and improving his recall skills.
Excellent course and look forward to further enhancing my dog training skills utilizing Leerburgs training experience. "
- Jason H on 03/19/2024
"I bought your video course Training Your Dog to Come When Called 2024 and it is literally the best course I have ever purchased and I train continually - online and in person (Agility, Rally-O, and Scentwork and Fenzi online).
I became re-acquainted with you, Ed, in recent years after growing up with German Shepherds and, in the last 17 years, Golden Retrievers.
You are such a great video trainer! I love the "tips" and "asides" that you add to the pure lessons. in a word: wisdom. SO much to digest! I will be watching this over and over to catch what I miss. Loved Cindy's 20 minute walk! SO valuable to watch her incorporate training throughout the walk. I could go on and on. But my reason for messaging is to THANK YOU for giving me an affordable lesson. One of my Goldies (the overly friendly one ) recently decided that visiting ring crew during his Agility Trials is more rewarding than running the course efficiently with me. After 2 years of beautiful agility runs! So we are taking a breather from trials while I go through the steps you lay out so clearly. Goal? Reflexive Recall 100% of the time. We will get there (with you and Cindy as guides, how can we not?).
Again, THANK YOU for providing this - it is THE BEST Training Value that I have encountered."
- Mary S. on 05/07/2024
"Great course, lots of good videos and demos. I have completed 18 training courses at Leerburg in the past 2 years since I got my dog. I wish I had started much earlier before bringing our dog home. I have made many mistakes, and only realized they were mistakes through the coursework at Leerburg.
Recall was one of my first big mistakes. I would call my dog and then when she came to me I would put her in her crate. She quickly learned that when I called her to come she was going in her crate which she did not want to do. I am still working to correct that. We don’t use the crate now unless the dog will be left home alone, so she doesn’t get much crate time, but still if I call her to come and she thinks I’m going to put her in her crate she comes but will maintain some separation just in case. You gotta laugh. I used to get mad but quickly learned that wasn’t helping. She is 30 months old now and has matured. I use a remote collar for a recall backup only when we are outside of our fenced yard.
I was pleased to see that my walks are pretty similar to the walk Cindy demonstrated in this course. I use a 20 ft Leerburg Biothane long line. I had a handle stitched in on mine but I don’t allow her to drag it. In Florida it seems like the line is always wet and it’s hard to hold onto when it’s wet. I typically do not ask for any behaviors outside of the basic obedience behaviors I need to control the dog around triggers and distractions. I want her to enjoy the walk and I allow her to explore as much as we have room for. On a given day we have 3 or 4 distractions. Deer, Turkey, squirrels, armadillos that run right at us as if they are not scared in the least of an 80 lb Malinois. The worst of all are the feral cats, since they hide in the tall grass and wait till the dog scents them then spring into the air and take off. I think they do it intentionally. Some have learned that a dog on a leash is no threat so they just sit off a bit and watch as the dog reacts twitching their tail as if to tease the dog.
I have struggled a little with the remote collar recall corrections trying to find the right levels for these various distractions and am likely guilty of nagging the dog rather than changing her behavior. That point was reinforced in this course and I have since made some progress on that issue. She is a reactive dog, inadequate socialization was another big mistake. I can fully relate now when Micheal Ellis says “ more restrictions in the beginning equals more freedom later. Unlike Cindy, we need to keep a little more distance from her triggers than simply moving off the trail and I am careful to always ensure I have room to provide that separation.
We are slowly overcoming her reactivity issues. I have been using the recall, place, and the heel command much like Cindy was doing in the video to redirect her when we have triggers approaching us. I have also struggled with engagement on command with distractions.
In a distraction free environment she will engage and remain engaged, but once there are distractions she focuses on the distraction and would not take food or redirect without forcefully turning the dog, so in the beginning I had no option but to reverse course. Now when I see the trigger I can position her and while she still watches the trigger most times, we can usually allow the triggers to pass us in almost any direction as long as the separation is adequate. The distance is slowing reducing.
This course has reinforced my management skills and strengthened her recall for sure. Our progress has been encouraging. We are not in a hurry. We enjoy our time out each day and I feel like we are making progress every day. Some days are better than others. Motorcycles are still a challenge. I can position her as they approach and she will be doing fine, then at the last minute she just can’t stand it any longer and reacts. It happens very quickly and it’s been hard for me to time her correction with the ECollar so I usually just end up forcefully restraining her and giving her a firm NO. I do think she understands that I am not happy with her behavior and the next time she might not react, but within a day or so she will again surprise me. It’s almost like she is planning it that way. She knows if she reacts early she will get corrected and possibly miss the fun of reacting at the last minute with more enthusiasm.
With another course behind me I am starting to feel like I kinda know what I am doing and I am gaining confidence in my ability to manage my dog effectively. Far from the perfection I see everywhere on line. I have learned so much in the past 2 years, but I still make real time mistakes. The difference is that now I can recognize that I made a mistake and plan for how I will do things differently next time while still maintaining a great relationship with my dog.
I recently made a significant mistake, but everything worked out ok. Our dog is not a door dasher, she will not rush out the door just because it’s open. However, if I am outside she will follow me out if she is accidentally given the opportunity via an open door and hasn’t been commanded otherwise. In this case I went out through garage door to retrieve the trash can after it had been emptied by the trash crew. The dog hates the trash crew for some reason. She hears the truck coming from blocks always and lets me know the trash truck is coming. The bad news is when I exited the garage door it did not latch behind me and of course she has learned to push the door to see if it will open, which it did, so out she comes looking for me, and there several houses away is the trash crew, so she takes off after them. I didn’t see her or even know she was out until I heard her barking and saw the trash crew running back towards the truck. As she went by me I called her to come and she turned right around and came back to me, but then she had no collar on so I had no way to positively control her and she was still very interested in the trash crew. I was standing in the driveway beside the truck so I asked her to load up in the truck, which she loves to ride, I guess more so than chasing the trash crew, so she quickly complied. Problem solved disaster averted. I know it could have ended with a much different outcome, and I felt so stupid for allowing that to happen. Once the dog was in the truck the trash guys went back to work and I apologized for scaring them. They laughed it off, but I know it scared them and me too. Thanks, Leerburg! I couldn’t have done it without you! Best"
- Joseph P on 09/14/2024
"The most important aspect of balanced dog training I have learned from this course would be patience. I have learned how important it is to be patient with your dog and not to rush how quickly you want them to learn to do something. One thing that I will always remember was when Ed says "when you get frustrated with your dog, put the dog away and ask yourself what YOU did wrong, because the dog did not do anything wrong". That changed my whole perspective for the better!
This course was very helpful for me and my 14 month old bulldog. We had gotten to a point where his recall was pretty good, but plateaued and just was not getting any better. I bought this course and started over with him going through the course. We have played all the recall games, we have worked on these at home and out at the park on walks, or at the pet store. I see a very noticeable difference in his want to come to me when called now. I now know where my initial mistakes were and have been able to identify and fix them with the help of this course. I have no doubt that he will get to where I want him to be with time now! "
- lauren h on 09/09/2024
"Thank you for for providing such a comprehensive course. I found the 14 modules incredibly valuable, particularly the “call away” concept, which gave me new insights into recall training. The use of touchpads in the training process was also very intriguing and something I’m eager to explore further.
The inclusion of student videos was a standout feature for me. Seeing the instructors review and correct common mistakes in real-time was incredibly helpful and made the learning process much more effective.
Overall, I’m extremely pleased with the course. Thank you for creating such an enriching and practical course!
"
- Michael K on 09/02/2024
How long will this course take to complete?
You can work at your own pace. There is no time limit on the course. If your goal is to end up with a reflexive recall, plan on spending a long time to generalize this behavior. Truthfully the recall is an exercise you will work on for the life of your dog.,
Does this course expire?
You will have lifetime access to this course.
Can I get feedback in this course?
Yes, you can submit student videos in this course and get feedback from Ed and Cindy.
We are going to test turning this recall course into an interactive course for a limited period of time.
Our normal interactive courses cost several hundred dollars, simply because they are so time-consuming for the instructors to view student video uploads and answer course forums. If you want to take a short (under 3 Minutes) video of your training session and post it to the specific module that the training video applies to, we will watch the video and offer advice. The video will go into the STUDENT VIDEO Segment of the respective module and other students in the course will have an opportunity to learn from the video and our comments. Please read the rules before uploading your video.
How much content is in this course?
There over 93 Videos totaling over 6 hours of content to watch.
There is also written content in every segment of the course. The written content would add up to a book of material. It's our feeling that everyone learns differently, some learn by watching videos, and some like to read and watch videos.
This course includes 64 instructional videos and 29 student work videos.
What's the difference between this course, the DVD, and the on-demand stream?
DVD: -- (Updated 2024 DVD Coming Soon), Receive a physical DVD copy
Stream: 5 hours, 30 minutes, Lifetime access, Stream from anywhere on all smart devices, Divided into chapters; jump to where you need to go, & Add notes at specific timestamps to review important topics (Student videos are not included in the stream.)
Online Course: 93 videos (over 6 hours), Includes 29 student work videos, Submit student videos for feedback, Additional text content, Lifetime access, Watch from any smart device, Take part in forum discussions with instructors and classmates, & Receive a certificate upon completion.