Selected Product: | Adam's Task: Calling Animals by Name Paperback Author: Vicki Hearne Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing Release Date: 2007-03 ISBN-10: 1602390029 ISBN-13: 9781602390027 List Price: $14.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Story of Edgar Sawtelle: A Novel (Oprah Book Club #62) ISBN-10: 0061768065 ISBN-13: 9780061768064 List Price:$25.95 The Other End of the Leash: Why We Do What We Do Around Dogs ISBN-10: 034544678X ISBN-13: 9780345446787 List Price:$14.95 For the Love of a Dog: Understanding Emotion in You and Your Best Friend ISBN-10: 0345477154 ISBN-13: 9780345477156 List Price:$15.95 Bandit: The Heart-Warming True Story of One Dog's Rescue from Death Row ISBN-10: 1602390703 ISBN-13: 9781602390706 List Price:$14.95 Animal Happiness: A Moving Exploration of Animals and Their Emotions ISBN-10: 160239167X ISBN-13: 9781602391673 List Price:$14.95 |
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Have you ever watched a horse flick her tail or had a dog greet you at your door and known in your heart that the animal was exhibiting something more than simple instinctual responses? If so, you must read this book. In it Vicki Hearne asserts that animals that interact with humans are more intelligent than we assume. In fact, they are capable of developing an understanding of “the good,” a moral code that influences their motives and actions. Hearne’s thorough studies led her to adopt a new system of animal training that contradicts modern animal behavioral research, but—as her examples show—is astonishingly effective. Hearne’s theories will make every trainer, animal psychologist, and animal-lover stop, think, and question. St Vicki | Customer Rating: | | Vicki Hearne was a great friend and teacher to me and countless other people. Her generosity helping people to understand and train their dogs was overwhelming. This is one of the most important books ever written about animals and the concept of training dogs and horses. Only those willing to fully engage in that task can understand it. No one loved and respected animals more than Vicki. No one was ever more committed to their well-being. If you want to read one book to grasp the potential and actual greatness of the human/animal relationship, this is the book. | A Very Important Book | Customer Rating: | Not only is this an enjoyable, life-affirming, and ultimately truthful book in every sentence written, it is also one of the most important books of the 20th and (so far) the 21st centuries. In this age, where we have become so far removed from Nature and are only just beginning to see the consequences of our actions regarding Nature, this book brings us back to the truth of the animal part of Natural Law. The sections regarding the American Pitbull Terrier are particularly pertinent and telling. | Animal Lovers will love this book | Customer Rating: | | Vicki Hearne clearly knows animals. This book is an interesting glimpse into the animal psyche, and how we can bridge that gap between humans and animals. I was a bit skeptic on picking this up, but after thumbing through the first few chapters, was engaged and won over. If you are training an animal, and the conventional methods are failing you, give this a try. | Lovely | Customer Rating: | | One of the most stimulating and moving books I have read in a decade. Her tales of living with and learning from animals (particularly the saga of the pit bull) practically made me weep. For anyone who loves, lives with, and wants to know more about, domestic animals, this is a wonderful read and an excellent gift. | Cruel and outdated. | Customer Rating: | | This is one cruel woman (as another reviewer mentions, she does advise the canine equivalent of water boarding to correct digging behavior). You can find a training book to give you permission to do the most horrid things imaginable to dogs (and other animals), if that's what floats your boat. Some trainers recommend hanging bossy dogs until they pass out! If, on the other hand, you are a humane person, skip this and go read Pryor's _Don't Shoot the Dog_. Train your dogs through reinforcement and behavior modification (operant conditioning). Love them, listen to them, observe them, challenge them. It's timimg, consistency and patience. My dogs stop digging if I calmly say "don't dig there." And no near-drowning experience was necessary teach them that. Just a smile and a "good dog" when they stop the offendng behavior. |
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