When we had traditional, on-campus programs at the Ethology Institute, every year the new students would invariably fall into two groups: those who wanted to become dog trainers and those who wanted to become horse trainers. Every year, I would tell them the same, âIf you want to become good trainers of your favorite species, youâll have to train other species, youâll have to gain some perspective.â
In principle, it doesnât matter what other animals or animal species you train. Cats, rats, parrots, they are all good and they all have a lesson for you to learn. However, there is one little and cute animal that stands to me as our (almost) ideal teacher. It is charming, social, curious, shy, and relatively easy to train. You have probably guessed it. Iâm talking about the guinea pig. Today, Iâm going to tell you how these little, cute animals can make you a better dog trainer, a better horse trainer, a better animal trainer, andâmost importantlyâa more âcompleteâ individual. Please, keep reading.
The basic skills you need to train a dog are the same you need to train any other animal. One differenceâand this is good news for youâis that (mainly due to our common history) there is no other animal as easy to train as a dog. On the other hand, there is a limit to how much you learn if you only train dogs.
Dogs forgive our mistakes and are nearly always motivated to cooperate. Other species scrutinize us far more thoroughly. We must earn their trustâif they donât trust us, they wonât cooperate with us. A horse will not follow you if it doesnât trust you and it takes a lot to earn the trust of a horse (and only a moment to lose it). You can offer it as many carrots as you like, but if it decides you are not someone to be trusted, the best carrots in the world will be to no avail. A cat will blink, at least twice, at you and the treat you offer it before even considering moving into your direction. Then, if it deems your request reasonable, it may just indulge youâotherwise, no deal.
The guinea pig, a favorite prey of many predators including humans, is social and fearful by nature. We donât share a common evolutionary history with it as with the dog. You wonât get anything for free. Youâll have to work to gain your guinea pigâs trust and show it that co-operating with you is profitable in both the short and the long term.
Training guinea pigs will teach you the theory of animal learning. Youâll have to be precise and use the right procedures to produce the right behavior. Youâll explore the whole spectrum of operant conditioning, but youâll be left gasping for more. Youâll find yourself desperately attempting to think like a guinea pig, thus entering the realm of ethology.
You can teach dogs many things without a proper plan. They are so active and eager to please that, sooner or later, they will do something you like, which you can reinforce. With dogs, you can play by ear and sing along, but with other animals, youâll need to plan. Timing is important when you train your dog, but surprisingly enough, youâll still achieve acceptable results even if your timing is off. With dogs, itâs like singing a melody out of tune and your friends still recognizing it. With guinea pigs, youâd better sing in tune or they will tacitly suggest you get your act together before going back to them. Itâs tough, but itâs also a good lesson about life.
Much like horses, guinea pigs tend to react fearfully when in doubt (the key to their survival throughout their evolutionary history). Displaying composed, self-confident behavior works well, but anything more assertive than that will backfire on you. Dogs, these ever amazing animals, give you a second chance (and understand our bad âaccentsâ in dog language); a horse or a guinea pig hardly ever do so. If you as much as think of trying to bully a guinea pig into doing what you want, it will probably freeze for up to 30 minutes, which is a real stopper for any aspiring trainer.
Youâll learn soon enough that coercion is not the way to go at all. Thus, youâll learn the secrets of motivation and the beauty of working within and with your environment, rather than attempting to control it, and that in itself will lead you to unexpected and welcomed results.
If they could, Iâm sure your dog and your horse would thank the guinea pigs for what they teach you when you train them, for you become, undoubtedly, a much more subtle and balanced trainer. Youâll be in control of yourself rather than the animal, motivating rather than forcing, showing the way rather than fumbling about, achieving results with the least (sometimes even imperceptible) amount of intrusion into your favorite animalâs normal behavior.
If you have a chance, give it a try. We can never learn too much, can we?