Phase 6: Add Duration

Timeline: Weeks 5-8 (4 weeks total)

Goal: She holds the down position for extended periods (2 seconds → 10 seconds → 30 seconds → 60+ seconds).


When to Start Phase 6

Only begin after she’s responding reliably to verbal “down” cue (Phase 5 complete).

She should be downing 8-9/10 times on the verbal cue with no hand signal.


Duration Progression Overview

WeekDuration GoalFocus
Week 52-10 secondsTime only, you’re right next to her
Week 610-30 secondsExtended time, reduce treat frequency
Week 730-60 secondsAdd mild distractions (your movement)
Week 860+ secondsTime is solid, ready for distance/bigger distractions

Critical Marker Difference

Use “GOOD” Not “YES”

  • “YES” = excited marker that makes her want to pop up and come to you
  • “GOOD” = calm marker that means “keep doing what you’re doing, more is coming”
  • Reserve “YES” for when you’re RELEASING her from the position

Week 5: Time Only (2-10 Seconds)

Goal

She holds down for 2-10 seconds while you stand still right next to her, no distractions.

Training Protocol

StepYou DoShe DoesYou Mark/Reward
1Cue “down”She downs-
2WAIT 2 secondsShe holds down”GOOD” (calm marker)
3Feed treat between her pawsShe stays down-
4WAIT 2 more secondsShe holds”GOOD” + treat
5Release (“break”)She gets up-

Total duration: 4 seconds (2 sec + treat + 2 sec + treat + release)

Progression Through Week 5

DaysDuration GoalProtocol
1-22-4 secondsWait 2 sec → treat → wait 2 sec → treat → release
3-44-6 secondsWait 2 sec → treat → wait 2 sec → treat → wait 2 sec → treat → release
5-66-10 secondsWait 3 sec → treat → wait 3 sec → treat → wait 3 sec → treat → release
7Test 10 secondsWait full 10 seconds, treat at 3, 6, 9 seconds, release at 10

Key Points

Feed Treats IN POSITION:

  • For down: Between her front paws (not above her head - that makes her sit up)
  • Goal: She learns “staying here = treats keep coming”

Start Small:

  • 2 seconds feels ridiculously short, but it’s building the foundation
  • If you start with 10 seconds right away, she’ll break position and learn that’s okay
  • Build gradually so she succeeds at every step

If She Breaks Position:

  • Don’t reward
  • Reset and try again with SHORTER duration (make it easier)
  • Only increase duration when she’s succeeding 8/10 times at current level

Success Metric for Week 5

By end of Week 5, she holds position for 10 seconds with 2-3 treat deliveries, 8 out of 10 times.


Week 6: Extended Time (10-30 Seconds)

Goal

She holds position for 10-30 seconds. You’re still right next to her, no distractions.

Training Protocol

StepYou DoShe DoesYou Mark/Reward
1Cue “down”She downs-
2WAIT 5 secondsShe holds”GOOD” at 3 seconds (verbal only, no treat yet)
3Feed treat in positionShe stays-
4WAIT 5 more secondsShe holds”GOOD” at 3 seconds
5Feed treatShe stays-
6WAIT 5 more secondsShe holds”GOOD”
7Feed treatShe stays-
8Release (“break”)She gets up-

Total duration: ~15 seconds

Progression Through Week 6

DaysDuration GoalHow Many Treats
1-210-15 seconds2-3 treats
3-415-20 seconds3-4 treats
5-620-25 seconds3-4 treats
725-30 seconds4-5 treats

Key Points

Reduce Treat Frequency:

  • Week 5: Treat every 2-3 seconds
  • Week 6: Treat every 5-7 seconds
  • She’s learning to hold longer between rewards

Use Verbal “GOOD” Between Treats:

  • Say “good” calmly every few seconds even when you’re not giving a treat
  • This keeps her engaged and reassures her she’s doing the right thing
  • Helps bridge the gap between treats

Variable Duration:

  • Don’t always go to the max duration
  • Mix it up: sometimes release at 10 seconds, sometimes 20, sometimes 30
  • This prevents her from anticipating the release at a specific time

If She Gets Wiggly:

  • She’s not ready for that duration yet
  • Go back to shorter durations for another day
  • Make sure you’re feeding enough treats to keep her motivated

Success Metric for Week 6

By end of Week 6, she holds position for 30 seconds with 4-5 treat deliveries, 8 out of 10 times.


Week 7: Mild Distractions (30-60 Seconds)

Goal

She holds position for 30-60 seconds while mild distractions occur. You’re still close to her.

Mild Distractions to Add

DaysDistractionWhat You Do
1-2Your movementShift weight, scratch your head, look around
3-4Small stepsTake 1-2 steps side to side (not away)
5-6Hand movementsWave your arms, clap softly, gesture
7CombinationMove, gesture, shift - multiple mild distractions

Training Protocol

StepYou DoShe DoesYou Mark/Reward
1Cue “down”She downs-
2WAIT 5 seconds, then add distraction (shift weight, take small step)She holds despite distraction”GOOD” + treat immediately
3WAIT 5 seconds, neutralShe holds”GOOD”
4Add distraction (wave arm)She holds”GOOD” + treat
5WAIT 5 secondsShe holds”GOOD”
6Add distractionShe holds”GOOD” + treat
7Release (“break”)She gets up-

Total duration: 30+ seconds with 3-4 distractions

Key Points

Reward DURING/AFTER Distractions:

  • If she holds position while you move = immediate treat
  • This teaches “when distractions happen, holding position = big reward”

Keep Distractions Mild:

  • Week 7 is NOT the time for big movements, loud noises, or other dogs
  • You’re just adding small things: your movement, gestures, shifting
  • Goal: She learns to hold position even when things aren’t perfectly still

If She Breaks During Distraction:

  • The distraction was too hard
  • Go back to easier distractions (just shifting weight)
  • Build up more gradually

Start Reducing Treat Frequency:

  • Week 1-2: Treat every 5-7 seconds
  • Week 3: Treat every 7-10 seconds (but always after a distraction)

Success Metric for Week 7

By end of Week 7, she holds position for 45-60 seconds with 3-4 mild distractions, 8 out of 10 times.


Week 8: Solid Duration (60+ Seconds)

Goal

She can hold down for 60+ seconds reliably with mild distractions present.

What You’re Doing

  • Same as Week 7, but she’s demonstrating it consistently
  • Varying the duration (sometimes 30 sec, sometimes 45, sometimes 60)
  • Building confidence in her ability to hold

Success Metric for Week 8

She holds down for 60+ seconds with mild distractions, 8/10 times.


Integration Into Daily Routine

Where to Practice Duration Daily

ContextWhenFocusExample
Meal prepBreakfast & dinner30-60 secondsWhile you prepare her food, she holds down
Settle timeEvening2-5 minutesShe settles on a mat during calm time
Training sessionAfternoon (3:45pm)Current phaseDedicated duration practice
Random throughout dayWheneverGeneralizationQuick 10-20 sec holds

Troubleshooting Week 5-8

Problem: She Breaks Position Constantly

Solutions:

  • You’re progressing too fast - go back to shorter durations
  • Feed treats MORE often (every 3 seconds instead of 5-7)
  • Make sure you’re using “GOOD” not “YES”
  • Check that you’re feeding treats IN position, not making her move to get them

Problem: She’s Anxious/Stressed During Duration

Signs: Yawning, lip licking, whale eye, panting, whining

Solutions:

  • Shorten duration significantly (back to 5-10 seconds)
  • Increase treat frequency (feed every 3 seconds)
  • Remove all distractions
  • Practice in a place she’s very comfortable
  • Build confidence with easier exercises first

Problem: She Anticipates the Release

What it looks like: She pops up at exactly the same time every session

Solutions:

  • Variable duration: sometimes 10 sec, sometimes 30 sec, sometimes 45 sec
  • Don’t always go to max duration
  • Release is random, unpredictable - she has to wait for your cue

Progress Checklist

  • Week 5: Holds 2-10 seconds, 8/10 times
  • Week 6: Holds 10-30 seconds, 8/10 times
  • Week 7: Holds 30-60 seconds with mild distractions, 8/10 times
  • Week 8: Holds 60+ seconds with distractions solid and reliable
  • Ready to move to Phase 7: Distance & Distractions

Next Steps

Once duration is solid at 60+ seconds (Week 8 complete), you’re ready for Phase 7: Distance & Distractions. She’ll learn to hold while you step away or while bigger distractions happen.


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Teaching Down - Complete Guide