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When Life Hands You Lemons: Training on the Fly in Real Life

My dogs and I walk daily. Frequently, these walks take place in a cemetery close to my house. I have a self imposed rule on walks that my cell phone stays in a pocket unless I am taking a picture, which is only occasional. On a recent walk, I broke this rule. On the same walk, I also broke with tradition by simply depositing my car keys in the pocket of my rain jacket since it possessed deep pockets. Normally, I would attach my car keys to the ring on my handy dandy treat pouch that wraps around my waist, right along side the poop bag dispenser.

Image of Debby McMullen's three dogs, waiting by the car for AAA to retrieve the car keys locked inside.

Waiting for AAA.

Unfortunately for my sanity, said deep pocket had a hole in it. A hole that did not lead to the lining but instead, to the great outdoors. Because of my periodic distraction with my cell phone (I made one phone call and checked my email), I failed to notice that my car keys slipped through the hole that I didn’t know about.

We walked a longer route than usual in celebration of the milder weather that allowed for walking without teeth chattering. It was nice until the final approach to my car when I started fumbling for my keys and discovered nothing. My confusion turned to panic.

I got to my vehicle and accepted that my keys were indeed MIA. To add to my dilemma, I had just two days prior had to call AAA to unlock my vehicle with my keys inside, at the grocery store after a particularly grueling day. So because that had been the second keys in the car episode of the last two months, I threw my spare keys into my purse. Which was now locked hidden inside my car. I had been told at the last service call, that I had reached my limit for service until renewal in one month. Oh joy.

I first attempted to retrace my route to look for my keys but my dogs were not having it. They rebelled and made it clear that the walking was done for the day. I called several friends to see if anyone my dogs were comfortable with were available to hold onto them while I searched for my keys. Everyone was busy working though several tried to enlist help. I broke down and called AAA.

I explained to the dispatcher that I don’t allow interaction with strangers on walks in public. So I instructed her to convey information on how things would progress when the driver arrived. She assured me that she would relay this information. I hung up warily.

We waited. And waited. A car drove up and parked within ten feet away. Mourners visiting dearly departed loved ones. Mourners with crutches and already stressed guardian breed dogs wondering why they can’t get into their beloved car don’t mix. We moved behind my vehicle and practiced downs with hand targeting. All was now much more peaceful.

Mourners with crutches depart and AAA pulls up. The instructions given to the dispatcher evidently not passed on to the driver, he exits from his truck and strides purposely towards me. I gently halt him and give him instructions, thankfully before my dogs feel threatened by his direct approach. All is peaceful again. While he works on what they consider their very large crate, they practice Find It and more hand targeting as well as offered downs. This is the best game ever for them today.

Success at last! The car is open once again and we have keys. They cannot get in their big crate fast enough. Relaxation is upon them and all is well again. For those of you who are wondering, I retraced my route on foot alone again and no keys so I left my number with the office. I have high hopes that once the negative energy disperses for the day, they will turn up.

But back to the dogs. This could have been among my worst nightmares. Multiple large dogs, small owner, scary strangers and no known safety to access. But by staying as calm as possible and employing force free training cues that my crew was familiar with, this turned into an adventure that caused some heavy slumber later that day. And I got far more exercise than I had anticipated. Never a bad thing when you are trying to tone and firm for the upcoming season!

Training tip of the day, aside from don’t bother with checking Facebook while walking your crew, is prepare for the worst and make it the best. How have you turned bad into good with your crew? Tell me below.

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6 Comments

  1. Jackie of Asgard March 22, 2014

    Great job on keeping the AAA guy safe… Lol! Many people forget that immediate and stressful situations can occur in a matter of minutes. Having the right tools and techniques keeps all parties involved safe and calm.

  2. Helen Smith March 23, 2014

    Excellent blog showing how quick one has to think if one’s original plans fall apart! Your story reminded me of a breakdown incident. My battery ran flat as I was trying to start my old car. Anyway, two dogs were in crates, two loose behind the crates. One is nervous of men – fine outside, given the freedom to make choices and move away. A workman fixing something in the road offered to do a push start but I knew I wouldn’t be skilled at depressing the accelerator, and clutch and turning the key or whatever you have to do simultaneously to jump start the engine. I weighed it up in my head quickly: either we could mess around with my trying to do the pedals or I could just let his man who knew what he was talking about get on with it, and I then try to minimise my dog’s stress in the back. So I let him do it. he got into the car, I got out. My dog started having a small meltdown in the back. The man wanted me to help push the car with another person who offered to help but I couldn’t and decided quickly to sit next to him and chuck pieces of food into the back, hoping that some of the pieces would land next to the dog who was barking. The man was so nice and normal about my weird behaviour. He never said a word whilst I threw pieces of food over my head, whilst trying to answer his questions about the car. My dog stopped barking during this but it turned out the jump start didn’t work after several goes. So then I bid him farewell and had to wait for the official breakdown man to arrive – and we went through the process again. She was a lot less frantic and then calmed quicker. The additional benefit was the food pieces being eaten by the others meant they did not join in any barking for barking’s sake. Despite my dog going ‘over threshold’, these were learning opportunities – and the moral of the story is you never know when you are going to need fresh chicken bits so always carry a good supply for the journey! And…then remember to vacuum your car often.

  3. sandi March 25, 2014

    I finally resorted to a clip on my keys that goes on my pant loop. I’ve been in your situation many times before…awful.

  4. chris March 25, 2014

    Thanks for the great tips. I have a dog that is not distracted no matter what I try on him. If there is something -mainly another dog or a stranger -usually a man-that he does not like, he turns into Cujo. My husband and I witness the wild look in his eyes and we cannot get him to accept food, a ball, redirection, nothing. So I too am real leary about situations like this. Since I feel that his safety is in jeopardy-if he bites someone-I leave him at home and have to walk him when it is dark outside instead. The dark seems to help lessen some of the distractions. People do not seem to get that some dogs just do not do well with other dogs or strangers. Society seems to think that because they are dogs that they need to get along with everyone. I had an email a long time ago that was a person who was being told to just sit and take it when another person came up to them and got in their space. The email stated we don’t like it when people do it to us so why do we allow other dogs or people to do it to our dogs.

  5. Dog Training April 24, 2014

    Great post! Been reading a lot about training my new dog recently. Thanks for the info here!

  6. T.S. May 20, 2014

    again, breath of fresh air, another trainer who does what I do when needing to distract lol. although my dogs are friendly, when they are tired and want in their big crate they are antsy and that when one may break a cardinal rule such as sniffing a crotch to say hello. So hand touches and find it are great games, especially if you have treats left lol. Sorry to hear about your keys, refreshing to hear that people are using these faithful techniques to entertain tired dogs, they can be like 3 yr olds when tired, cold and ready for their big crate and the bed called the back seat, ready to snore all the way home. lol. cheers

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