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Showing posts with label training treats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label training treats. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

TreatTuesday: Wellness Petite Treats

Wellness makes these little grain-free Petite Treats for small dogs, but they work especially well as training treats for any size dog. The soft treats come in turkey and lamb varieties. These stay moist for a while when exposed to air, and the dogs thing they are pretty awesome.
Tiny soft grain-free dog treats

Good For

  • High-value training treats
  • Carrying around in pockets for a few hours without going hard or crumbly
  • Small and picky dogs

Not Good For

  • Regular training sessions, they only come in very small bags.

How Much We Like Them

I've been taking these hiking when I think we're going to encounter a lot of trail traffic. Zip isn't crazy about treats, but she likes them enough to eat them on the go. Ru also think they're pretty awesome.

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Treat Tuesday: Blue Buffalo Wilderness Wild Bits

Blue Buffalo's Wilderness Wild Bits are soft little cubes that are just the right size for training. Unlike many soft treats, these actually maintain their texture for hours when exposed to air. I don't care what kind of chemist wizardry is going on with that, these things are awesome. I'm not a fan of Blue Buffalo in general, they do a lot of shady things and basically all of their food is made out of chicken no matter what it says on the front of the bag. Still, their moist treats are hard to beat.
Wild Bits moist training treats that stay soft and don't dry up.

Good For

  • High-value training treats, they would be perfect if they were about half this size though
  • Shoving in Godzilla's mouth when passing a mountain biker on the trail
  • Staying soft and non-crumbly after hours in an open baggie in my pocket
  • Dogs with food allergies, these come in chicken, duck, salmon flavors and are made out of single protein sources plus potatoes and chickpeas. One of the very few Blue Buffalo products that isn't made out of chicken meal. (The crunchy biscuits are still made out of chicken meal, though.)

Not Good For

  • Dogs with potato or chickpea allergies

How Much We Like Them

I think I need to bring some of these with me every time we go hiking. Sisci Godzilla loves them, and they don't dry out and crumble. I mean, they probably would eventually, but these didn't after many hours.

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Treat Tuesday: Three Dog Bakery From Our Kitchens Training Treats

The guys behind Three Dog Bakery gave me this bag of From Our Kitchens Pork and Blueberry Training Treats at SuperZoo. These are one of the few products marketed as "training treats" that are actually an appropriate size for clicker training and other methods that use a high rate of reinforcement. They're pretty darned nutritious too, grain-free, and made mostly with pork, beef, chickpeas, and blueberries.
Pork and blueberry tiny treats for clicker training

Good For: Mid-value training treats. Picky dogs, even Ru and Zip like them. Clicker training. Reactive dog training. Trick training. Playing games. Hiding in puzzle toys. Training without making my hands smell vile. Dogs with allergies to poultry, eggs, grains, and sweet potatoes. Brisbane would have been able to eat these!

Not Good For: Super-high-value training in distracting environments. Dogs with allergies to pork, beef, chickpeas, or blueberries.

How Much We Like Them: I'm definitely throwing some of these into my next batch of treat trail mix.

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Treat Tuesday: Caru Alligator Recipe Baked Bites

A representative from Caru gave me a bag of their new Alligator Recipe soft treats at SuperZoo so I could write a review. These are a soft-baked jerky treat that is grain-free, gluten-free, and super allergy friendly. The first ingredient is alligator, followed by garbanzo bean flour, beet molasses, vegetable glycerin, dry milk, and potato flour. The treats are soft enough for Ru to chew up easily, and can be broken up into the perfect size for training treats without getting all crumbly. They're also tasty enough to tempt picky dogs.
Soft meaty allergy-friendly dog training treats!

Good For: Dog with allergies to everything but dairy and potatoes. Picky dogs. Breaking into training treats. Handing to the dogs on my way out the door without making my hands smell all meaty.

Not Good For: Low-value training treats. Long-lasting chewing.

How Much We Like Them: Gonna ask my local shops to carry these if they don't already, because I like the idea of feeding my dogs alligators.

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Treat Tuesday: NutriSource Grain Free Rabbit Treats

I got these NutriSource Grain Free Rabbit Treats for Sisci's agility class. Brisbane is allergic to poultry, eggs, corn, barley, and sweet potatoes, so I had hoped that a grain-free rabbit-based treat would be good for him too. Alas, they contain chicken fat, eggs, and sweet potato. Sisci likes them though!
Dog treats made from rabbit and a bunch of other stuff.

Good For: Small-sized high-value training treats. They're slightly bigger than Zukes Minis, and the dogs like them better.

Not Good For: Dogs with allergies to chicken, rabbit, peas, potatoes, sweet potatoes, chickpeas, eggs, or tapioca.

How Much We Like Them: They make a good addition to our training treat trail mix when I'm just working with Sisci and not Brisbane.

Thursday, April 21, 2016

DIY Training Treat Trail Mix

When Brisbane was younger, I used to buy him something called "beef trail mix". It was a sizable canister of various bits of jerky, freeze dried lung and liver, and I don't even know what all else. There were all sorts of sizes and textures and flavors, all in just the right size for training treats. I loved it because some of the bits were higher value than others, and I was grabbing them at random to Briz was never quite sure what he was going to get.
dog treats
Ziwi Peak dried meat dog food, Fruitables Bacon Whole Jerky,
Loving Pets Buffalo Lung, and cheese.

I was pretty devastated when the product was discontinued a couple of months after I discovered it. Still, the idea was brilliant. I love using a variety of training treats in one bag. The uncertainty makes the whole game more exciting for the dog. Karen Pryor likens it to the difference between a soda machine and a slot machine, there's a reason people get addicted to gambling and not Coca-Cola machines.

Trail mix is also an awesome way to stretch those high-value treats by sneaking in some lower-value stuff as well. Most of my crew find kibble to be pretty boring anywhere more exciting than home, but will happily accept a piece now and then while working for better stuff. Everyone except for Ranger, who will only accept freeze dried liver and spits out every lesser offering.
dog treat mix prep
Preparing to chop dried lung, cheese, and bacon jerky.

There are some important considerations when putting together a random bunch of dog treats, and storage is important unless you will be using it all up in one training session.

Rule 1: Never mix freeze dried liver with anything moist. Whether it's ground beef, hot dog bits, or boiled chicken, don't do it. Wet freeze dried liver tends to fall apart when it rehydrates, and the result is pretty vile.

Rule 2: The refrigerator is your friend. If anything in your mix is perishable, keep the whole bag in the fridge between training sessions.
training treat mix
All chopped and ready to mix.

Rule 3: Keep it airtight. Soft treats like Zukes Minis and Ziwi Peak food tend to get hard and stale if you let them hang out in a treat bag for very long. According to my dogs, this makes them significantly less awesome.

For this week's agility class, I made a bag of trail mix based on dried buffalo lung, which is super smelly and therefore very high value. I'm not sure if it rivals freeze dried liver though, I haven't asked Ranger yet. Some Ziwi Peak dried meat dog food went in, as well as some bacon Fruitables Whole Jerky, a little bit of Acana Singles lamb kibble, and a couple sticks of cheddar jack cheese. This was enough treats for a couple of trick training sessions and Sisci's entire agility class, which usually involves continuous reinforcement for allowing obese labradors, spooky show border collies, and hordes of baseball kids to exist in our vicinity. (I have no idea why Sisci is terrified of conformation border collies, she also finds baby dolls and stuffed horses similarly horrifying).
training treat trail mix
Trail mix!

Trail Mix Ingredients

  • Meat (chicken, steak, pork, ground beef, hot dogs, cooked liver, bacon)
  • Dog Food (kibble, air dried, freeze dried)
  • Commercial Dog Treats (whatever your dog will work for)
  • Cheese
  • Cereal, crackers, and other people food
  • Veggies (higher value when swimming in a bag of meaty treats, but my dogs won't work for them)
  • Fruit (banana chips, apple slices, dried apricots, anything that will hold together)

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Treat Tuesday: Primal Beef Nibs

Hey, Primal makes bite-size training treats now! These Beef Nibs are made from beef heart, sea salt, and that's it. I think they look almost exactly like cross sections of a Slim Jim, but I'd need to chop up an actual Slim Jim to be sure. Primal also makes chicken, turkey, and pork treats in nib-form.
beef heart dog treats

Good For: High-value stinky training treats. Picky dogs. Dogs with allergies.

Not Good For: Feeding an entire handful at a time since there's not a whole ton in the bag.

How Much We Like Them: Even Ranger was willing to eat them without hesitation. Obviously we ran out of them immediately, need to buy more now.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Treat Tuesday: Little Chewzzies

These Little Chewzzies by Emerald Pet arrived in our October Allergy-Friendly BarkBox. These little bones are 5 calories each, and are fairly easy to split into smaller pieces for tiny training treats. We got the salmon flavor, which I thought were pretty awesome until the results of Brisbane's allergy test revealed that he is allergic to barley. Guess what's in all the corn-free wheat-free treats? (I might be a little bitter about this.)
Emerald Pet moist dog training treats

Good For: Mid-value training treats for non-exciting training at home with minimal distractions. The dogs will eat them and even work for them for a bit, but get tired of them pretty quick.

Not Good For: Dogs with barley allergies. High-value training treats in distracting environments. Extended training sessions with lots of rewards.

How Much We Like Them: Enough to use up half the bag before taking a picture of them. Significantly less since learning that Brisbane can't have them, as he is my bottomless pit and head treat-snarfer.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Treat Tuesday: Fruitables Skinny Minis and Merrick Power Bites

I noticed Fruitables Skinny Minis and Merrick Power Bites in stores for the first time about a day apart. I'm pretty sure these were both revealed at SuperZoo 2015, and his stores just after that. SuperZoo is one of the biggest pet trade shows in the world, it happens at the end of July every year and we can expect a flurry of new products to hit the market immediately afterward.

These are both chewy, semi-moist, small, stinky training treats and basically the same thing. The big difference is that the Merrick Power Bites are grain-free. Those are made out of peas and potatoes, while the Fruitables Skinny Minis are made out of oatmeal and brown rice. Power Bites have beef at the top of the ingredient list, Skinny Minis have bison quite a bit further down below some grain ingredients. Both are sourced and made in the USA.


Good For: Mid-value training treats for balance work and low-distraction environments. Happy food-loving cattledogs.

Not Good For: Picky chihuahuas who think they want to do balance work but then decide it's not worth it when they find out what they'll be getting paid.

How Much We Like Them: Both of those bags are basically empty. I have another of the Skinny Minis because I got a two-for-one deal on them.

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Treat Tuesday: Alaska's Puppy Love Wild Salmon Jerky Treats

I've been trying to figure out where this bag of Wild Alaskan Salmon Jerky Treats came from, since I don't remember buying it and its not in any of my subscription box pictures.  I'm pretty we got it as an oops bonus after BarkBox sent us forbidden proteins in our allergy-friendly BarkBox for a second month in a row. These are from the Seldovia Wild Seafood Company's brand of dog treats, Puppy Love.

Good For: Mid-value training treats for balance and perch work. Picky chihuahuas who don't like most of the treats Brisbane gets for balance and perch work.

Not Good For: High-value training treats in distracting environments. Picky heeler puppies. Making my hands not smell like fish.

How Much We Like Them: See how that bag is almost empty? I had to save these just so I could take this picture.