philiplu a day ago

Sorry - my 9 year old golden doodle still doesn't get the concept of fetch. He's an expert at keep-away though. Throw the toy or ball, he'll chase it gleefully, then come back to just out of reach, drop the toy, and hover over it waiting for me to make a move at it. He'll lunge for the toy, back up a bit, drop it, and the cycle continues.

  • tempestn a day ago

    4 year old golden doodle, exactly the same thing.

    • _whiteCaps_ 18 hours ago

      I spend an hour in a field with my golden doodle, refusing to chase her. She had to bring the ball back to me and drop it. I threw the ball twice in that hour. The rest of the time she spent running past me trying to coax me into chasing her.

      The least food motivated dog I've ever owned. Nothing brought her back, not even cheese.

      Have fun turkey99!

LeifCarrotson 21 hours ago

It can be trained, at least in some cases.

When attention/reward/engagement cease when the ball is not returned and dropped - literally turn around and walk away dejectedly - but a successful return results in praise, treats, and MORE FETCH, my dog quickly learned to bring it back.

For my sister's dog, the key is to have a second ball alluringly held ready to throw - the one that's already in the mouth is forgotten about except as a means to get the second ball thrown. The dog has to bring it "all the way!" (point at the ball that was dropped halfway back) before the second ball is thrown.

It's definitely a tough one to solve, though, especially when the act of running around with the ball in the mouth is the rewarding behavior...