Teach your dog to "drop-it" in ONE easy step!

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Published 2018-05-10
Angel Soriano (AKA DogMan) shows us how to teach any dog to drop any item in one easy step, in today's segment of DailyDogMan.


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About Angel...
Angel Soriano is a seasoned animal behavioral professional who has been training dogs for over 30 years. He is an actively involved, civic-minded person who contributes to worthy animal causes. Holds licenses from the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA); Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (OBNDD); and Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigations (OSBI). His expertise covers drug dogs, search and rescue (SAR), tracking, cadaver search, personal protection, police dogs, severe behavior curving, and Occupational Dog Bite Safety. Served as Chairman of the board for the Oklahoma State Board of Commercial Pet Breeders in 2010-2011. He was awarded patents by the US Patent Office on advanced scientific techniques and specialized training disciplines such as Perfect Balance®, and Occupational Dog Bite Safety®. He is a frequent keynote speaker in the utility industry on the topic of Dog Bite Prevention, as well as Veterinary conventions.

Book Angel to speak at your next event, he is an outstanding high-energy keynote speaker. For more info, email [email protected]

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All Comments (21)
  • Thank you so much! My 6 month old puppy is over protective, Anything she can lay her paws on is now hers. If you give her food she will growl at you and sometimes bite, Also she will rip up toys and shoes and things Like that. We try to get her to drop The item but she will growl and bite. This has helped me so much and now i can actually play will my dog and drop items without her biting!
  • @crazyldy002
    Thank you so much I will surely try it. God Bless you and yours
  • @Aperegrine90
    Very helpful. It's the approach I'd taken but you've given much greater insight into his to make it even more effective
  • @Nina_Sophia
    Very helpful! I tried this with our 1yr old australian shepherd. (He loves to take our things and run away with them, sometimes chewing and damaging or destroying them.) He got it down pretty quickly. I only worked with him for about 10-15 minutes. Tomorrow we will work on it some more. I can't wait to see how things progress over time!
  • @YRREBLRAK
    I ❤️ straight forward training.
  • @shlokgaonkar1761
    Please tell me what to do if he doesn't come back with the ball
  • @paigewright487
    My dog wants to mouth the toy and keep away. I'm doing this this weekend!!! Thank you!
  • @susanal1527
    this game made my gsd only drop it when he sees that i have an other toy in my hand and when he knows this he wont bring the toy to me but drop it halfway ( if im lucky ) and comes right to me for the next bal
  • I'm really excited to try this. We took in a 2 year old red nosed pit bull from a neighbor who was basically unsocialized and not trained at all. I've been working with him diligently on numerous things - leave it, waiting at the door, ignoring people and other dogs on walks (the former is going better than the latter) - all of which he has learned with amazing speed. He's really, really smart, and really, really sweet, and I can't get him to drop ANYTHING. This is a real problem, because he's very much a toddler and will put anything in his mouth, even if it will result in any emergency trip to the vet if I can't get it away from him before he eats it. It has been very clear that he's turned grabbing things into a game of "keep away," but there's nothing fun about trying to get a Mr. Potatohead ear away from him before he chokes on it.
  • @richardamos7728
    Explained and shown simply how to achieve the dog to drop the ball. I shall try your method tomorrow with my 3 year old German Shepherd. Thanks 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
  • @jameslucas5171
    I have a 2 year old Amstaff mix. Very quick and athletic. She takes other dog's balls and will not give it up so I can return to owner. As you know and Amstaff is in the same breed family as a pit bull and she has that strong determination to not back off from taking a ball as though her life depends on it. I often tell people she would not drop the ball, even if you used a baseball bat. They are always the attractive rubber balls you purchase, like "chuck it." She especially is crazy about balls that squeak. The harder I try to get the ball from her, the more determined she is to not drop it. She is too strong to take it from her mouth. She literally goes crazy as though it is prey. I have tried many things like using an e-collar with sensitivity at full strength. This just makes her more determined to not give it up. She is not distracted by anything. Offering her treats or another ball is fruitless. The only thing that works sometimes is to hook a leash to her harness and pull her away from the ball if she sets it down for a second. It is at the point that I can't take her to the dog beach or a park with other dogs playing fetch. If I do, I must keep my distance from other dogs playing fetch. Do you have any recommendations?
  • So question??? How would you do this with a Blind GS? Receintly adopted him and age possibly 4-5yrs??