Things You'll Need
- 5 small paper cups
- 5 different small pieces of food treats
- Many small pieces of individual hamster's favorite treat
- Plastic clicker
- Props like ladders, hoops or jumps
- Bathtub
- Pencil
Instructions
Check the dwarf hamster at night to see if it is awake. Dwarf hamsters are nocturnal and so are best trained at night, according to Hamsterific. If your hamster is awake, it will be moving about, grooming and sniffing for food.
Take food treats and paper cups to the bathtub. Place one small piece of food treat underneath each of five different paper cups. Place the hamster in the tub and watch to see which paper cup it knocks over to eat the food. Dwarf hamsters possess an excellent sense of smell and use that more than sight. From now on, give your hamster the food it selected only as a training reward, according to Hamtaroplanet.
Prime the clicker. The goal is to teach the hamster that soon after a click comes a treat. Dwarf hamsters catch on to this really quickly. Click, then present the food piece. Keep on doing so until the hamster looks expectantly for the food after you click. This may take more than one training session.
Teach the hamster to follow a pencil. Click and treat when the hamster touches the pencil. Move the pencil away very slowly, so the hamster follows. If the hamster follows, click and treat. You can move the pencil up a ladder or over a jump in order to help the hamster do a trick. The hamster follows the pencil in order to get treats.
End each training session on a good note. Dwarf hamsters have short attention spans, so keep each training session to 10 minutes. Click and treat to end a session.