Where Every Moment is Golden
Program at Legend GOLDENS
overview of the program utilizes
Multiple locations, surfaces, textures, multiple litters playing together, puppies playing with adult dogs, puppies playing with multiple people old and young.
more on puppy culture can be found by Googling it.
After Puppy leaves us it is very important that you continue to expose your new puppy to 30 different things/places/events/enviorments/people/other dogs in first month of being in new home. We have done everything we can to launch your puppy into this concept. Golden puppies who stay at home, never see anything but home, tend to become scared/stressed in new places/people/events/travel and typically have separation anxiety issues.
So continuing to expose your new puppy to lots of "new" things over the next year or two will greatly help to keep your puppy happy and friendly in all situations. the Key word in this is "NEW".
Exposure to what is "normal" is not going to keep your puppy moving towrds being happpy in all places and with all people.
Puppies need to experince NEW things daily so that they can learn about life.
Puppy Culture is a program developed by Jane Killion, a professional dog trainer, and breeder. It is a comprehensive, organized program for breeders to follow during the first weeks of a puppy’s life.
Puppy culture is a comprehensive program for breeding and raising puppies that aim to optimize their physical and mental development. It is based on the latest scientific research and focuses on providing puppies with a wide range of early learning experiences and socialization opportunities.
Puppy culture aims to provide puppies with a foundation of experiences and skills that will help them grow into confident, well-adjusted adult dogs. This includes providing puppies with exposure to a variety of people, places, and experiences, as well as
teaching them basic manners and obedience skills.
Puppy culture programs may include activities such as exposing puppies to different surfaces, sounds, and sights; providing them with opportunities to play and explore; and teaching them basic commands such as "sit" and "stay." Puppy culture programs may also include training in canine behavior and development, as well as guidance on how to properly socialize and care for puppies.
Puppy culture is often associated with breeding programs that are focused on producing high-quality, well-adjusted puppies. It is considered a holistic approach to breeding and raising puppies that aim to optimize their overall health and well-being.
The first 12 weeks of a puppy’s life are incredibly
important. This is an almost magical time when a breeder has the power to change the outcome of a puppy’s life by what we choose to teach him. By doing just the right things at just the right time,
we can give your puppy the best start possible.
At Legend , we use a combination of protocols commonly used in the Puppy Culture program - specifically in our home-based program.
Making sure that your puppy’s genetic material is excellent
is only the beginning. The physical and emotional health of the mother will affect the health of her puppies. Since research has shown that puppies born to mothers that receive prenatal massage are
more docile and enjoy being touched, we spoil our mothers with lots of affection and belly massages. A puppy’s predisposition to form deep and meaningful relationships begins even before they are
born.
Early Neurological Stimulation (ENS) begins on day 3 and continues through day 16. Research shows that tiny struggles and stresses in appropriately small doses are actually good for
puppies and will help them grow into strong, healthy well-adjusted adults. Benefits include greater tolerance to stress, greater resistance to disease, a faster adrenal system, a stronger heart rate,
and a stronger heartbeat. This is a gift that a breeder can only give their puppies once during the window of 3-16 days.
Behavioral markers are used to identify the beginning and end
of each developmental period because every puppy is different and these timelines are simply guidelines. The transitional period begins when the puppy’s eyes open and ends when they first startle
upon hearing sounds.
Most people think of socialization as exposing their puppies to as many new experiences as possible while the puppy is young. While this is part of the process, it’s not enough. Our goal is to raise dogs
that have the emotional intelligence to connect with you. Emotional intelligence can be taught to young puppies and one of the goals of the Puppy Culture Program is to teach breeders how to do this.
There are 7 key things that will nurture the emotional intelligence of a puppy.
Weeks 12-20: Puppies go home with their families. This
starts the socialization period to adjust to their new family’s lifestyle and be introduced to new people and experiences.
“Manding” is an automatic sitting in front of a person the
puppy is interacting with. It is not a required behavior or a rule, but rather an acceptable behavior taught to replace jumping on a person. It is not the same as a “sit” command.
Think of manding as sitting when the puppy would be otherwise jumping up.
A puppy is naturally predisposed, programmed if you will jump
on a dog or person they are soliciting interaction from. Excitable jumping is charming in a teeny puppy but gets old fast in an adult dog. As the author of Puppy Culture Jane Killion puts it, manding is a voice given to a puppy. Now, he can tell you he wants to interact and do it in a welcome way, without
jumping on you or an x-pen as you’re approaching, for the rest of his life. He is no longer in danger of being pushed off or shut down while either asking for attention or responding
to your call for it.
Dogs are constantly processing information, consciously and
subconsciously. Most of the training we do with our dogs is done through operant conditioning - prompting behaviors, and reinforcing or punishing the performed behavior. The dog learns that
each particular behavior has a consequence, and that consequence will dictate its behavior in the future. This is training through the dog's
consciousness- the dog learns that its choices have consequences, Good or Bad decisions dictate whether it is worth repeating.
While we're doing this, we are also subjecting ourselves and
our dogs to the laws that govern classical conditioning - relating a neutral stimulus to an unconditioned stimulus enough times creates a subconscious conditioned response from the dog to the
previously neutral stimulus. The responses a dog has to a classically conditioned stimulus are NOT a choice on the dog's part.
Below are some examples of the most commonly referred to
experiments in classical conditioning, Pavlov's Dogs:
An emotional response to a stimulus is
the way the dog feels when presented with it.
Some general examples:
While there's no way to sit a dog down on a psychologist's
couch and ask them how a certain event made them "feel", we can view external behaviors the dog exhibits when presented with a given stimulus and evaluate, based on the science of canine body
language, whether the dog is anticipating something good or something bad happening from that experience.
THE ANTICIPATION OF SOMETHING GOOD CAN BE TRANSLATED TO THE
HUMAN EMOTIONS OF HAPPY AND EXCITED.
THE ANTICIPATION OF SOMETHING BAD HAPPENING CAN BE TRANSLATED
TO THE HUMAN EMOTIONS OF FEAR AND SADNESS.
Current empirical evidence related to Canine PTSD
(Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) further indicates that dogs can and do have long-lasting emotional responses to previously neutral stimuli.
"Conditioned" - the dog has been classically conditioned. "Emotional response" - the
internal or external reaction when presented with a given stimulus or environment.
A Conditioned Emotional Response is the feeling a dog has about a specific stimulus or environment.
CERs are formed either through the owner's conscious attempt
to generate or manipulate them, or completely independent of conscious effort. CERs are happening during every training session, purposefully or not.
Examples of unanticipated CERs:
MANIPULATING THE CONDITIONED EMOTIONAL RESPONSE
CERs can also be intentionally manipulated for the benefit of
the dog.
In cases of behavior modification, the handler can
classically condition the dog to perceive a certain stimulus differently than it had before. Referring back to Example 3, the dog could become unconditioned to fear the sirens by reconditioning
the dog to associate the noise with something more pleasant, like food.
The longer neutral stimulus x is associated with
unconditioned stimulus y, the stronger the dog's conditioning to stimulus x will be. To use the example, the longer sirens are associated with food, the stronger the dog will be conditioned to hear
sirens and feel the same way about them as they feel about food (sirens = food).
The inverse of this is true as well. The longer neutral
stimulus x is DISASSOCIATED with unconditioned stimulus y, the weaker the conditioning to stimulus x will be. In the same example, the longer the dog hears sirens without something frightening
happening to it, the weaker the conditioning will be to hear sirens and feel the same way about them as they feel about almost dying (sirens ≠ death).
We have to remember that fearful and painful events are
remembered longer and are more salient to the dog than anything positive or rewarding. Why? Survival. If you stepped into the road and were bumped by a car, for a very long time,
you would be cautious about stepping into the road again, and for good reason. You have been conditioned to be slightly afraid- in human psychology, cautious- of roads, and you will now
look both ways before crossing the street.
It only takes one instance for a previously neutral stimulus
to be viewed with fear for a very long time. In the above examples, of a lifetime of hearing sirens without consequence had no bearing on the one incident that sparked the fearful conditioning
to the noise.
On the other hand, when we think about our positive
reinforcement markers ('yes', 'good', *click*, etc.), we have to "load" those to get to a point where the dog is conditioned to them. When we
"load" a positive reinforcement marker, we pair the marker with food hundreds of times. *Click* - Treat, *Click* - Treat, *Click* - Treat, etc., etc.,
etc. until the dog begins to salivate at the sound of the click the same as it would to the presence of a treat.
Compare the number of repetitions necessary for a stimulus to
become fearfully classically conditioned (1) to the number of repetitions necessary for a stimulus to become positively classically conditioned (100s).
IT TAKES LONGER FOR A DOG TO DISASSOCIATE FROM A FEARFUL STIMULUS THAN FROM A POSITIVE ONE.
In Puppy Culture, we use litter boxes to start teaching the
puppies to leave the “nest” to eliminate starting as young as 3 weeks old. This works right along with their natural instincts to keep the nest clean.
As the puppies grow, the litter box area gets smaller and
moves farther away from the “den”. The idea is that they learn there are many places they may not use as a bathroom and one place where it’s ok. Then, they are taken outside on a routine to
learn that they are to use the outdoors to go. Most litter materials have a natural smell to them so they have no problem transitioning to the outdoors.