![]() L: Can a left handed chop mean something different than a right handed chop?Į: Yes. Too confusing for the dog and open to misinterpretation IMO. But he beats you to the second chop and drops instead of sits. ![]() What if you trained your dog for speedy responses (which is what I aim for). L: How 'different' do the signals have to be - eg.can a single 'karate chop' represent one thing and two 'karate chops' represent another?Į: They should be different. I don't know enough about agility to know what signals I'm going to need. I can see I'm going to end up unteaching some signals once I start agility. OK - So left for 'left', right for 'right'. One hand can become a directional signal (as they do in retrieve training/trialling) two arms stretched out)Į: Depends on what you are doing. L: Should my signals all be one handed and can some be two?Į: Some can be two (eg. Do I only teach hand signals for a subset of commands? Which ones? Edited Jby Luke W How 'different' do the signals have to be - eg.can a single 'karate chop' represent one thing and two 'karate chops' represent another? Can a left handed chop mean something different than a right handed chop? Should my signals all be one handed and can some be two? It seems there's a lot of commands he's going to eventually learn but I can only come up with a limited number of hand signals.īearing in mind I'd eventually be involved in trialling how should I go about getting together a list of hand signals. ![]() I'm looking for any accepted lists of hand signals or a reference book or failing that, some advice. I hope to eventually compete in obedience and agility trials so I'd like to start off on the right foot and not have to reteach any particular signals. I'm starting to plan for my hand signals. I've got a variety of commands in the list so far.including watch, sit, stand, down/drop, stay, spit it out, walk loose, walk close, come, freeze, toilet, release, back up, get down, go to pen, go to crate, etc The trainer I engaged for some one on one private sessions suggested I create a 'training dictionary' with a list of verbal commands and hand signals.
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