To educate your canine tricks indeed easy bones you need to have some small price treats, be in a quiet suitable place and keep the training sessions to 10-15 twinkles or your canine will start to get board, remember when he gets commodity right lots of praise and a price treat, just be careful not to get him over agitated or he'll loose attention.
Getting your canine to give you his paw, first get your canine to sit, also as you say the word'paw' take your tykes paw in your hand, give the canine a treat, repeat this, after a many times don't take his paw so snappily, say the word, count to one also take it, you should notice he's bringing his paw up as you say the word if he doesn't go back to saying it at the same time, do it a many further times also decelerate your response again.
After 2 or 3 sessions most tykes pick this bone up relatively happily.
The high five, like a lot of tricks the high five is a progression of an earlier trick, in this cast the paw trick. Hold a treat in your fritters and raise your hand slightly advanced than you would for the paw trick.
You canine will suppose you want to do the paw trick and will reach for the treat with his paw as we tutored him before, as he reaches up you say “ high five” and give him the treat. Once your canine has learned the paw trick this bone should be veritably easy to learn and with just a many sessions he'll be doing it on hand signal rather than voice control.
Getting your canine to jump through a circle, before you start this bone I would just like to ask you to be a little sensible and not hold the circle too high as you don't want your canine to heart himself while doing the trick. Sit your canine on one side of a hoola circle, get the tykes attention on your hand on the other side of the circle take a treat in your hand and give the canine the command to release him from the sit, at first he may essay to go around or under the circle, if this happens start again, your canine wants the treat and will soon learn that going around or under doesn't get it so he'll soon start going through it, when he does say hoopla and give him the treat.
He'll soon be jumping through the circle on the command of hoopla. When I started doing this trick I had a medium sized canine (a Labrador) so I started with the circle 6 elevation from the ground and sluggishly raised it to midriff height, if you have a lower canine you might want to start with the circle touching the ground so the canine just goes through the circle and also sluggishly raise it as he gets used to the trick.

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