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Jean;1188 said:Hehehe... You are supposed to look both sides of the street, not your dog. :dogsmile:
Q. Can the dog really read street lights?
A. No. Guide dogs are trained to stop at kerbs and wait quietly while their handler listens to traffic. When the handler decides it is safe to cross, he or she will command the dog to go forward. The dog is trained to disobey that order if it sees a car heading in their direction that the handler may have missed hearing.
Something that I have done with Ellie since her first ever walk. Now she will automatically stop and sit at curbs until told otherwise. If cars are coming, I say "No, busy".No. Guide dogs are trained to stop at kerbs and wait quietly while their handler listens to traffic.

Teach your dog to stop and look before crossing a road. You can first teach your dog the directions ("look right" and "look left"), and then combine the commands to sit and to look right-left-right (remember that Jenny lives in Britain, continental European dogs will have to learn to look left-right-left!) before given the permission to cross. (Jenny uses the command "Any cars coming?" for the entire trick). If you are consistent with your training, you can possibly condition your dog not to start crossing the road as long as he sees cars approaching, which would make this trick also extremely useful. 