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Training a Dog to Heel Fort Lauderdale FL

Many dog activities rely on training a dog from the left because the trainer or owner needs to keep the right hand free to signal. Many herding and hunting dog trainers in Fort Lauderdale train their dogs from the left because they need to have their right hands free for using equipment or giving signals.

Command Dog Training Inc
(954) 587-7016
2913 Riverland Rd
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Paws For Training
(321) 960-3295
5205 Citrus Blvd
Cocoa, FL
Best Behavior Dog Training
772-978-7863
2335 81st Ct
Vero Beach, FL
Joyce Moore Dog Training
727-816-3973
5849 Sunshine Park Drive
New Port Richey, FL
The Holistic Dog Trainer
(305) 803-3820
8901 SW 214 Street
Cutler Bay, FL
Dog Obedience Club Of Hollywood
(954) 989-1267
1015 North 13th Avenue
Hollywood, FL
Kovacs Dog Training
(321) 323-6535
4500 Sheridan Ave
Cocoa, FL
Advanced Behavioral Training
904-443-7049
Jacksonville, FL
Pet Etiquette
(772) 284-9011
P O BOX 2573
Port St. Lucie, FL
Academy For Dogs International
(239) 304-2275
2642 E Tamiami Trail
Naples, FL
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Training a Dog to Heel

It’s a fair question: why do we ask our dogs to heel on our left side? For that matter, why do we do so many things to the left? Why do we mount a horse from the left side? The reason is basically the same. We have our dog’s heel to our left because this is a right handed world.


In the old days, when men still wore swords, it was necessary to mount horses from the left side for safety purposes. With the swords hanging on the left side (for right handed riders), it was easier and safer to mount from the left. Consequently, all of the tack for horses has always been made to be buckled and put on and taken off from the left, too.


When it comes to dogs a similar logic applied. When handling a dog a person would want their right hand (usually the stronger hand) free. The left hand could hold the leash. They would want their right side unimpeded. The dog could be on the left. And so, the dog should walk and heel on the left side. Or so it used to be. Today owners often teach their dogs to heel on either side.


Many dog activities rely on training a dog from the left because the trainer or owner needs to keep the right hand free to signal. Many herding and hunting dog trainers train their dogs from the left because they need to have their right hands free for using equipment or giving signals.


So many people in the world are right handed (approximately 80 percent) that training dogs from the left has become the standard way of training. It’s not necessarily good or bad, it’s just the usual way of doing things. Dogs probably don’t care which side is used.


On the other hand, dogs do seem to be right-pawed or left-pawed themselves. You can tell if your dog is right-pawed or left-pawed by filling a Kong with peanut butter or some other food your dog loves. Place the Kong in the floor for your dog. Record which paw your dog uses to touch the toy first -- until he has made 100 touches on the Kong with either his right and his left paw. (Don’t record touches with both paws at the same time.) Dogs that use their left paw 64 times are left-pawed; dogs that use their right paw 64 times are right-pawed. If your dog has fewer than 64 uses of either paw then he is ambidextrous.


You may already have some idea of whether your dog is left or right-pawed. Does he always paw at you with one particular paw? Does he try to pick things up with one of his paws? These can be tip-offs that he favors one of his paws over the other.


So, there is really no particular reason why dogs are taught to heel on the left. It’s mostly due to the fact that the majority of people are right handed. We teach dogs to heel on the left as a tradition now. People have learned to teach their dogs to heel on the left and it would probably confuse people to start teaching them otherwise.


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