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Basics of Komondor Training

Basics of Komondor Training

It's essential for Komondor parents like you to know certain basic factors that determine your relationship with your Komondor and can go a long way in training him effectively.

Before you begin training your Komondor, it is absolutely essential that you build a loving bond with him. This is important as it helps you to understand his needs and instincts and also allows your Komondor to have complete trust in you.


Let us see how.......

How To Bond With Your Komondor

Building a bond with your Komondor is the first and the most crucial step involved in training him successfully. As soon as you bring your Komondor home, you must first try to develop a caring and loving relationship with him in order to win his trust and confidence.

When Komondors are secure in the knowledge that they belong to the family, they are more likely to respond better to their owners' training commands. Just like with any relationship, there must be mutual trust and respect between you and your Komondor.

Trust takes time to develop and respect comes from defining boundaries and treating any breach of those boundaries with firmness and fairness.

Without enforceable limitations, respect can’t be developed. And when there is no respect, building a bond with your Komondor is almost impossible.

4 Golden Rules To Building A Relationship With Your Komondor :
  • Spend quality time together;
  • Take him out in the world and experience life together;
  • Establish and promote a level of mutual respect; and
  • Develop a way of communicating to understand each other's needs.
Building a bond with your Komondor will not only help you manage him better but will also make your Komondor calm, quiet and an extremely well-adjusted pet.

Love Your Komondor and He Will Love You back

Once you're succesful in building a bond with your Komondor, you can rest assured that training him and teaching him new and clever tricks will be a cakewalk.


How Your Komondor Learns...

Your Komondor's learning period can be divided into five phases:

The Teaching Phase - This is the phase where you must physically demonstrate to your Komondor exactly what you want him to do.

The Practicing Phase - Practice makes Perfect. Once a lesson is learnt, practice with your Komondor what you have just taught him.

The Generalizing Phase - Here you must continue practicing with your Komondor in different locations and in an environment with a few distractions. You can take your Komondor out for a walk, or to a nearby park and command him to practice whatever you've taught him.

Practicing the learned lessons in multiple locations and in the presence of small distractions will help him learn and retain lessons better .

The Testing Phase - Once you're sure that your Komondor has achieved almost 90% success....he responds correctly almost every time you give a command, you must start testing his accuracy in newer locations with a lot of distractions.

Example: Take him to the local shopping mall and ask him to obey your command. He may not come up with the correct response the very first time you do this, but you must not lose hope.

The idea is to test your Komondor to see how he responds in an environment which is new to him. Set-up a situation where you are in control of the environment and your Komondor.

There are only 2 possibilities:
  • Your Komondor succeeds!!! (Trumpets please!)
  • In case your Komondor fails, re-examine the situation. Review and/or change your training. Then try testing again.
Keep on testing until he succeeds. Follow the rule of the 3 Ps – patience, persistence, praise.
Internalizing Phase - Finally, comes the extremely rewarding phase where your Komondor does everything he is taught to do even without your commands.
Remember:
  • Never scold your Komondor if he fails. It's not his fault. You have failed as a trainer!
  • You must be patient and persistent for your efforts to show rewards.
  • Appreciate and love your Komondor when he does it right! A little encouragement will work wonders for your Komondor.

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