Gene and Holly, thank you both for today. Ivy is a sweet dog with a lot of potential.
Today gave us a clear starting point:
confidence building, hand shyness, collar desensitization, recall foundations, doorway manners, the Five-Minute Rule, and helping Ivy learn how to succeed on her own.
The goal is not perfection overnight. The goal is a dog who feels safer, responds more confidently,
recovers better, and learns that calm, clear structure makes life easier.
This page gives direction. The E-Portal gives the full explanation. Please read the foundation sections, especially the areas on dog communication, marker words, the Five-Minute Rule, recall, emergency recall, and jumping.
Portal password: Super
This page gives direction. The E-Portal gives the full explanation. Read these sections before trying to do too much at once.
Dogs are visual, tonal, and spatial. This is foundation work for Ivy, especially with confidence and jumping.
Learn what YES means, when to use it, why timing matters, and why “good girl” is encouragement, not the marker.
Use this around arrivals, departures, visitors, excitement, and emotional resets.
Ivy should learn that calm behavior, attention, and simple structure help her access the things she wants.
Practice everyday recall separately from emergency recall. Keep it fun, clear, and highly reinforced.
Read all emergency recall phases before taking this outside on a longer training line.
If you do not want Ivy to jump, please read the jumping section and apply the visual, tonal, and spatial rules consistently.
Open the expandable plus signs inside the portal. There is a lot of important coaching material hidden in those sections.
One of the first things we noticed today was a little hand sensitivity and hesitation when reaching toward Ivy’s collar. This is common with confidence issues, and we will improve it gradually over the next several weeks.
I demonstrated using a larger collar by placing my hand through the opening and encouraging Ivy to voluntarily place her head through the collar to earn a reward.
A large slip lead can also work well for this exercise because it creates a generous opening.
For everyday training and recall work, I like a martingale collar because the small control loop makes it easier to safely guide or catch a dog during recall exercises than a standard flat collar.
Recall training is only as strong as the paycheck behind it. For Ivy, we need to find the reward that makes her stop, turn, and think, “Okay, those humans are suddenly very interesting.”
Pick one special food that is used only for emergency recall. Do not use that same reward for regular recall, doorway work, casual snacks, or everyday obedience.
One of the best confidence-building exercises we will be working on is Ivy’s Emergency Recall. We will build this skill in phases rather than rushing the process.
We will also continue evaluating how motivating the ball is for Ivy. If the ball becomes one of her favorite rewards, we can incorporate it into recall games as training progresses.
We will know more once we get Ivy on a 20, 40, and eventually 60-foot training lead and see what actually motivates her outside.
Emergency recall is not just obedience. It teaches Ivy to turn, move toward you, and succeed under pressure. Every successful repetition helps her believe she can make good choices.
Today we noticed that Ivy showed a little more confidence when Sybil was nearby, which is perfectly normal. I brought Sybil back into the session because it helped Ivy feel more comfortable and successful in the moment.
Sybil can help Ivy feel safer and more willing to participate. That support was useful today because it helped Ivy relax and gain some confidence during the session.
Long term, Ivy also needs to practice without Sybil. We do not want Ivy relying on another dog as her only source of confidence.
Continue practicing the Five-Minute Rule every time you leave and return home. This also applies when friends or family members visit.
If you do not want Ivy to jump, please review the jumping section inside the training portal. Jumping is usually not solved by talking more. It is solved by clear body language, timing, and consistency.
Dogs read what they see. Your body position, hands, eyes, and movement all matter.
Your voice can calm Ivy down or light her up. Be careful not to reward excitement with excited sound.
How you move, step, turn, block, or invite space matters more than most people realize.
Several short training sessions each day are much more effective than one long exhausting session. Especially with confidence issues, we want Ivy finishing sessions feeling successful.
Keep this simple, clear, and consistent. Read first, then practice.
Track the things that matter: collar comfort, crack food, regular recall, emergency recall, solo confidence, and doorway manners.
| Date | Crack Food Tested | Collar Game | Regular Recall | Emergency Recall | Solo Ivy Practice | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ____/____/____ | ____________ | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ____________ |
| ____/____/____ | ____________ | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ____________ |
| ____/____/____ | ____________ | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ____________ |
| ____/____/____ | ____________ | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ☐ Yes ☐ No | ____________ |
Ivy does not need perfection. She needs clarity, patience, structure, and confidence-building repetitions. The more consistent you are with the foundations, the more secure Ivy will become.
Read first. Practice second. Keep sessions short. Keep rewards valuable. Build recall in phases. Practice with Sybil when Ivy needs support, but also give Ivy plenty of one-on-one confidence-building time.
Best results: buy tools to support the plan — not to replace the plan. If you’re not sure what to grab, text me a screenshot and I’ll tell you “yes / no / not yet.”