
The Everyday Trainer Podcast Your Dog Cannot Win A Game You Keep Changing
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Mar 13, 2026 A desert training retreat becomes a pressure test for real-world dog work. Learn about sticking to one clear goal per session and why marker timing matters. Find out how to build a verbal sit, a simple food-toss focus game, and why repeated rewards while moving back help. Hear why downtime, crates, and predictable consequences reduce stress, and how tools add clarity only after foundations are solid.
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Markers Lose Meaning If Used Inconsistently
- Markers are only useful when tied to a single, consistent target behavior.
- Meg warns that saying yes for everything makes yes meaningless and leaves dogs confused about what to repeat.
Open Sessions With A Go Food Toss Game
- Do start sessions by conditioning activation and engagement with a short chase-and-return game.
- Meg uses a verbal go plus tossed food and then shuffles backwards rewarding from both hands repeatedly so the dog stays with the handler.
Reward Multiple Times While Moving Backward
- Do reward multiple times while moving backward to keep the dog checking in instead of leaving after one treat.
- Meg alternates food in both hands and shuffles back, paying repeatedly so the dog learns staying near you is valuable.
