[Fred Hassen] Videos

www.sitmeanssit.com Video taken at the jam packed 2010 Pet a palooza dog event annually held in Las Vegas, Nevada. This video shows Fred Hassen training his 16 month old Labrador Retriever named ‘Charger’ through a large group of people and dogs passing by using a whistle to stop, start and direct the dog to a ball and running straight lines. http Franchise information on Sit Means Sit dog training can be found at www.franchise.sitmeanssit.com

Fred Hassen http://www.sitmeanssit.com showing a simple Labrador Retriever Water blind a long with some basic casting and a single water mark. Training your labrador in the water is a lot of fun for him.

Fred Hassen www.sitmeanssit.com showing a simple Labrador Retriever Directional drill a long with some basic casting and a single water mark. Training your labrador in the water is a lot of fun for him. Sit Means Sit Dog Training Franchise. Where we make the pets in this world…

www.sitmeanssit.com This Dog Training video with Fred Hassen of “Sit Means Sit” dog training company in Las Vegas Nevada, is seen here with “Sara”. “Sara” is a Labrador Retriever trained from a puppy with a remote dog training collar using the Sit Means Sit dog training system invented…

www.sitmeanssit.com Fred Hassen and 14 month old ‘Charger’ a black labrador retriever, are seen during some video from a teaching phase of the program where I am refining concentration on his ‘mark’ command. Having these fundamentals in anything you are doing where the dog has to concentrate on an object that he is going to retrieve, you want to bring things into the situation that will be distracting different pictures to the dog to refine his concentration. My movement around him initially makes the dog take glances at you, and especially if you line up on different sides, move behind him, or anything that may make the picture different to him. I use these opportunities to make him see that he must look at the object or ‘mark’ it. As he gets more immuned to all of this, all of his energy comes forward and his motivation becomes at it’s highest point. It’s the training process that will develop this most. The moving along the shoreline on the angle returns will allow you to turn very simple initial pictures, into a more complicated picture and allows me to teach concepts faster. You will see it all tied together in future videos, and you will at least know how the drill was started. I’m constantly challenging him, and raising his bar which keeps his attention and energy level high.