648117
Honored Member
I'm having a bit of trouble with free shaping.
I don't think I fully understand the concept of turning a behaviour offered during free shaping into a trick.
I'll explain...
Today I couldn't think of any easy new tricks to teach Holly so I decided to just click/treat for anything she offered. I know free shaping normally uses a box at first but I decided to try just standing still to see what Holly would do (I had no plan, I hadn't even planned to do any free-shaping and haven't really done it before, except once I tried the box game which ended up with the box being knocked over and then chewed so I sort of gave up on free shaping
).
But Holly was great this time, first she put her paw on my foot, then her paw and chin. Then a bow with her paws and chin on my foot. Then she tried my other foot. Jumped on a nearby chair followed by a flurry of her wiping her face with her paw, some more bows and downs, bow with chin down, then down with chin on her paw (so so cute). She shuffled backwards while lying down. Lot's of vocalisations, high pitched "yip" and low "grumbling", and head flicks. Walking backwards in a straight line then a curve. She offered quite a few behaviours in quick succession (I was impressed since I normally mostly use luring to train her). I found the whole thing very enjoyable and cute
she was so so cute 

and Holly seemed to enjoy it as her tail was wagging most of the time (she doesn't normally wag her tail much - i think it takes more effort than other dogs because it's so curly and she's a bit of a serious dog a lot of the time).
Anyway, I really liked the "grumbling" and a couple of other things but I'm not sure about how I turn these into tricks, especially if she only offered the behaviour once or if the behaviour was always offered at the same time as another behaviour.
So if anyone uses a lot of free shaping or understands how it works, could you please explain it to me?
Thank you
I don't think I fully understand the concept of turning a behaviour offered during free shaping into a trick.
I'll explain...
Today I couldn't think of any easy new tricks to teach Holly so I decided to just click/treat for anything she offered. I know free shaping normally uses a box at first but I decided to try just standing still to see what Holly would do (I had no plan, I hadn't even planned to do any free-shaping and haven't really done it before, except once I tried the box game which ended up with the box being knocked over and then chewed so I sort of gave up on free shaping

But Holly was great this time, first she put her paw on my foot, then her paw and chin. Then a bow with her paws and chin on my foot. Then she tried my other foot. Jumped on a nearby chair followed by a flurry of her wiping her face with her paw, some more bows and downs, bow with chin down, then down with chin on her paw (so so cute). She shuffled backwards while lying down. Lot's of vocalisations, high pitched "yip" and low "grumbling", and head flicks. Walking backwards in a straight line then a curve. She offered quite a few behaviours in quick succession (I was impressed since I normally mostly use luring to train her). I found the whole thing very enjoyable and cute




Anyway, I really liked the "grumbling" and a couple of other things but I'm not sure about how I turn these into tricks, especially if she only offered the behaviour once or if the behaviour was always offered at the same time as another behaviour.
So if anyone uses a lot of free shaping or understands how it works, could you please explain it to me?
Thank you
