![]() When your dog’s paw meets your hand, click/praise and treat. When your dog is consistently successful at this level, you can flatten your hand sideways and hold it out to your dog, asking them to shake by using your verbal cue. You want to start introducing the verbal cue right before your dog offers the “shake” behavior, and when you are confident your dog is going to shake your hand.Ĩ. You want your dog to make the association between the “shake” behavior and the verbal cue. When you hold out your hand right before your dog’s paw makes contact, say “shake,” then praise/click and treat. “Shake” is the most common cue, but you can use any word you wish. When your dog is consistently placing their paw on your hand, start introducing a verbal cue of your choice. Your dog will figure out that what gets the treat isn’t just scratching at you, but placing their paw on your hand.ħ. Ask your dog to hold their paw on your hand first for only for a second before clicking/praising and treating. You want to make sure that your dog understands what you want is their paw on your hand, so the timing of treating and praising is important.Ħ. Wait until your dog’s paw rests on your hand before clicking/praising and treating. ![]() Start slowly with building duration when your dog paws at your hand. This will help avoid confusion or accidentally teaching your dog to paw at you instead of shaking your hand.ĥ. You want to make sure that your dog completely understands the trick before adding in the formal cue. Remember, you aren’t giving any verbal cues to your dog yet.Have your dog hold their paw on your hand for slightly longer before you praise/click and treat. Once your dog is consistently pawing your hand, start building the duration and increasing the difficulty. Repeat the above step several times until your dog is consistently pawing at your hand.Ĥ. As soon as your dog paws at your hand, click/praise, open your hand, and give the treat.ģ. ![]() The key is to wait it out, not saying anything. Your dog may do some experimenting to figure out what you want, like sniffing, licking, etc. The following steps will help you easily teach your dog how to shake hands:Ģ. When you start teaching shake, be sure to have a lot of high-value treats or rewards. There’s no need to physically manipulate your pup by picking up their paw and forcing them to “shake hands” with us. The goal of teaching shake is for your dog to happily offer the behavior and show enthusiasm and understanding. It will amuse and impress your friends and family and it is a very polite way for your dog to meet new people. It’s cute, fun for dogs, and simple to teach. “Shake” is a classic dog trick and for good reason.
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