Puppy Training Methods Explained. Capture, Lure, Shape and Clicker
Most people imagine puppy training as teaching commands. Sit. Stay. Come. But with a very young puppy the real work looks quieter than that. It is about curiosity, confidence and helping the dog discover that learning with you is enjoyable.
Why Relationship-Led Dog Training Beats Punishment
Jenny invites Bob to live in her home. They do not share a language. When Bob guesses wrong, he only hears angry sounds or feels a shove. No guidance, only “not that.” He cannot leave, so he keeps trying to placate Jenny and still gets it wrong. That is how many dogs experience our homes. Not because we are unkind, but because we were told correction is the only thing that works. In truth, dogs learn patterns. When we make the first right step clear and worth taking, behaviour changes fast and the relationship softens. That is relationship-led dog training in plain English: less pressure, more sense.
