The Truth About Your Dog’s Body Language

March 12th, 2010
By Eric Letendre

Your dog is always trying to communicate to you through his body language. It can effect the training that you do with your dog. This video will show you what to look for when you’re training. Please leave your comments and suggestions for other videos.

Post By Eric Letendre (427 Posts)

Eric Letendre is a professional dog trainer from the United States and has been training dogs for over 20 years, teaching regular, average, every-day owners all over the world how to get the training results they want as fast as possible. Eric is also the author of numerous reports, the E-Book “101 Ways to Improve Your Dog’s Behavior,” “The Amazing Dog Training Man Book,” and produced and stars in his DVD “Secrets of a Professional Dog Trainer.”

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8 Responses to The Truth About Your Dog’s Body Language

  1. kim says:

    Thank you for this article! It was very informative and I will be putting that to use! I love reading your articles and watching your videos because they are extremely effective and helpful. Thanks again! (And my pups thank you too)

  2. Larry says:

    This really does work. I was walking a shepard, rottie, and 2 jack russels at same time. One of the russels got loose from his collar. I used the loose leash and looped it through the other three leashes and tied to nearby pole. I walked toward the run away russel and it kept walking away. When I got down low and called him using “name” and “come” comand in soft higher-pitch voice. He came. I used this/your method with a pitbull that was terrifing the neiborhood. Owners were suprised how well there dog responded to me. I tell people to stop the chase game and make it a play thing.

  3. Larry says:

    I forgot one important thing. I Praise the heck out of the dog EVERYTIME the dog comes to me even when they did something inappropriate. I want the them to come everytime. Next time it could be a life or death situation. Like running into the road like mine about did. Work on the unappropriate issues later or shortly afterwards in a positive training manner. I have found that positive training make future training easier.

  4. janet says:

    Love this explanation of drives. I have never heard it described so simply in a way I can apply to my dog training. thank you

  5. marlene says:

    Thank you

  6. Ayla says:

    I love this article, I found all your news letters so informative and I try to put them to use as soon as possible.

  7. George says:

    I forgot one important thing. I Praise the heck out of the dog EVERYTIME the dog comes to me even when they did something inappropriate. I want the them to come everytime. Next time it could be a life or death situation. Like running into the road like mine about did. Work on the unappropriate issues later or shortly afterwards in a positive training manner. I have found that positive training make future training easier.

  8. Simon says:

    I forgot one important thing. I Praise the heck out of the dog EVERYTIME the dog comes to me even when they did something inappropriate. I want the them to come everytime. Next time it could be a life or death situation. Like running into the road like mine about did. Work on the unappropriate issues later or shortly afterwards in a positive training manner. I have found that positive training make future training easier.

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About the author…

Eric LetendreEric Letendre is a professional dog trainer from the United States. For more than 20 years, he has been developing dog training techniques that have worked for dog owners all over the world. Eric operates from a home office or a laptop while traveling and draws on his experience and passion for dog training to show others how to develop a dog that is truly “Man’s Best Friend”.

Eric is the author of numerous reports, the E-Book “101 Ways to Hack Your Dog’s Behavior,” “The Amazing Dog Training Man Book,” and produced and stars in his DVD “Secrets of a Professional Dog Trainer.”

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