Advance former obstructed florida ( working dog about to turn conceded numerous agility titles and is working on her MACH. She and also qualified for AKC Nationals this year. is AKC ACT Evaluator and OneMind Dogs Instructor, and each year, she attends multiple seminars with different world team members and OneMind Dogs coaches to stay up-to-date on the latest agility training. Her introduction into dog sports was dog sledding with 10 years of experience. She now competes with her Shiloh Shepherd, Kingston, Rally Obedience throughout the Northeast. She holds various titles Obedience, Rally-O, K9 Parkour, Trick Dog Training, and Nosework. Her Alaskan Husky, Fuscia, enjoys her retirement at home on the couch after years of dog sledding. is active Fenzi Dog Sports Academy student, and has attended of Denise Fenzi's workshops and sports camps. shares his life with two grownup Retrievers, Comet and Ajax. Both dogs are registered Therapy Dogs with Pet Partners, and makes weekly visits with them at The Connecticut Hospice, as well as visits to area schools and nursing homes. is also raising a third Murphy, who has big dreams of being a therapy dog himself someday. Expert Reviewed Rabbits are very intelligent, social animals that can be trained quite easily. Unfortunately, many humans fail to train their rabbits, either because they use the wrong approach or they 't spend enough time on training. If you want to build a better relationship with your and train them right, you simply need to hop right and get started! Understand how a rabbit uses sight and smell. Bunnies do not well directly front of their faces. Their eyes are set far apart on the head and they to the side and far away better than up close. Rabbits are prey animals and need to predators from far away, that they can run and hide time to save themselves. Because of this, before you touch it, you need to let the rabbit and smell you. This give you easier time handling the rabbit. By letting it and smell you, it can verify that you are not a predator, and therefore no danger to it. Remember that kindness goes a way with a rabbit. Rabbits respond to kindness and make excellent companions who respond positively to your voice and presence if you treat them well. While you must have your rabbit's respect order to train it, you'll be most successful if your rabbit also feels loved and comfortable your presence. Use your rabbit's favorite treats. Since training is based on incentives, you'll need to find a treat that provides the most positive response. If you 't know what your rabbit's favorite treat is experiment a little. You can offer a new food, small amounts to avoid digestive upset, once a day and watch the rabbit's response. If they leave it alone, then it won't work as a treat, but if the munches it right down, you have a winner. Get your rabbit position for training. Stage your training the area and situation where and when you want the behavior to occur. For example, if you want to teach your rabbit to jump up on your lap when called, first put it near the couch. If you want to train it to go its crate at night, train it around the appropriate time, and make sure its crate is positioned where it normally be. Give your rabbit a treat immediately when your rabbit does something you want to reward. If the rabbit sits up as you lift your hand above its head as if sitting up to beg, give the treat right away to reinforce sit up. The reward need to be given within 2 seconds of the behavior. Keep providing the treats until your rabbit responds correctly nearly every time. When you're trying to