Trainer Joe DeMarkis confesses to a revelation: obedience training has direct applicability to a field dog. This might be obvious, or it might not, but if it is true it opens the door to many training activities that those who live in cities and suburbs can do on a weeknight without benefit of birds or firearms.
One of these revelations is the so-called place board. Joe says that dogs are place-oriented and that generalizations come hard. Train the dog to understand that his place is on the place board, and then advance to more challenging scenarios.
The place board can be as simple as a repurposed Welcome mat, but ideally, it is raised off the ground. This gives the dog bit of a feeling of not being fully in control (you are!) and it also makes it more convenient to work with smaller dogs. In the photo below, Larsen is on a place board that is raised about an inch, but other place boards are about a foot or so from the ground. The place board must be stable so that the dog is not fearful of the wobbling.
Introduce the dog to the place board by leading him or her onto it and commanding a sit. Treat liberally. Over time, you will get the dog to go to the place board on command. Once this is reliably accomplished, you can have the dog retrieve items and return to the place board.
What a great way to improve the beautiful spaniel retrieve to hand!
Larsen demonstrates his place board.
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