Hi JoAnne
I think the biggest change you can make is to change your mindset here
. but yesterday when we got home from practicing at a small, quiet mall I asked him to pick up one of his toys that was outside and bring it in and he flat refused! I should have known better, he was tired and all he wanted to do was come in for a drink.
By mindset, I mean to frame it as
he flat refused! rather than to think, ok, when he's hot and tired his retrieve isn't as strong. Rather than to wonder if he just felt like, I'm tired, I'm thirsty, and I don't want to pick up that thing when my mouth is all sticky with thirst.
It is incredibly easy --and any one of us who says we haven't done this is probably not being honest--
to just ask for one more thing in a dog who is doing so well. You put a few extra seconds on the 'stay' , you ask for a little longer eye contact with distractions flying around, you ask for one more retrieve ... and you lose the dog and the chance to reward. I've done it, and still struggle with the temptation to squeeze another rep out when my dog's just amazed me, but I've learned to rein myself in a bit
However, what should I have done/responded, how many times can I ask and if nothing then what?
Just ignore it, it didn't happen, keep walking. Make sure he is fed/watered/cooled down as needed. When you are also calm and fed/watered/cooled down as needed, you can work on your retrieves some more.
This wasn't a new task or a difficult one, he's done this a hundred times.
For him something was different. Maybe he was quite thirsty, maybe he views Retrieve as something one does 32x in one hour, and not more. Who knows? We do know that dogs follow cues based on context and environment, and either he was physically reluctant, or he didn't see the cue as pertaining to this situation. There is a well known anecdote, the famous Dr Ian Dunbar once asked a room full of trainers and their beautifully trained dogs if the trainers thought their dogs knew the cue "Sit!" Of course everyone said yes. He then asked everyone to lie flat on the floor and cue the dogs to "Sit!" Few, if any, of the dogs complied. They don't speak or understand human language -- they know signals in context. If you were crossing the street and a red light came on, you'd automatically look for a change in traffic. If a red light came on while you were walking to your front door, it wouldn't even occur to you. It's all context.
What do I do when he's 'won'? Just not rewarding him doesn't sound like the ideal answer, well for him maybe.
What you do is try to let go of the idea that this is a conflict that one side or the other must win. Believe me, your lives together will be even better than they are now, once you do this. It's not about mastering the dog, or withstanding his challenge, etc. It's a teamwork kind of thing, and a team member doesn't whoop and say "yes!" when he fails and the other team member doesn't punish him. It's not about winning, it's about making the team work.
Little

!
I'll be honest with you here, and I think that referring to a partner or team member as a little s--t, or turd, or whatever, is one of those things which can unintentionally undermine the relationship. Again it defines the relationship as one in which there is a master and a potentially defiant underling, rather than a cooperative partnership, and it also makes it easier to punish the dog, when you define him or her in derogatory terms. Rather than a creature with his own wants, needs, and reasons for doing XYZ (whether it's a lack of training, or a hurt tooth), the dog can be reduced to a series of reactions we deem appropriate or insulting to our authority. I'm not saying this is what's going on with you and your dog, but rather that this is a potential pitfall to be aware of.
I think in general that willful defiance is a rarity -- mostly it's a lack of training and proofing that leads to failures. There are cases where you can see the dog decide not to follow a cue -- she's chasing a squirrel, your recall command gives her a brief pause but she returns to the chase.
Even in these cases, it is a lack of training rather than a measure of disrespect by the dog which is behind the failure. As a predator, the dog will chase prey unless given a colossally good reason not to, and in that situation, the trainer hasn't given such a good reason. So the predator chases prey. It's not about a battle of wills, it's about dogs loving to chase squirrels.
To me, viewing things through the Koehler/Pattison/Millan lens of dominance and defiance is more of a burden than anything else. It's a tough way to live and train. I don't care who my dog thinks he is, as long as he is happy and comfortable in the world-at-large, and his behavior is acceptable. Does he think he is the true heir of the throne of Portugal? Maybe. I don't care, as long as he lies quietly while I cook and eat, doesn't pull on walks, doesn't annoy the cat, etc. As long as he is confident and relaxed at home and on walks, and happy to go new places and meet new people, he can plan for his Kingdom all he wants
