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Blog — dog training

What We Teach

What We Teach

  What We Teach Our approach to dog training is rooted in a comprehensive understanding of behavior, movement, and the canine nervous system. We work with the whole dog—supporting emotional, physical, and mental well-being—so that behavior change is both meaningful and lasting. Drive-Based Training with a Positive ApproachWe channel your dog’s natural drives into constructive, functional behaviors without suppressing energy. By working with your dog’s instincts, we create engagement, clarity, and sustainable change. Instinct-Led Engagement and Relationship BuildingWe utilize the innate, primal instincts of the canine mind to create opportunities for connection, play, and trust. This strengthens the relationship between...


Canine Adolescence

Canine Adolescence

  Many people are aware that puppies go through a "fear period" where they are particularly sensitive to experiences, and that it is important to protect them from having bad experiences during this time. Did you know that there is a second "fear period" during adolescence? As dogs become sexually mature, they go through another imprinting phase where positive and negative experiences become especially salient to their learning and ultimately end up shaping their personality.      This is a great time to keep training and hand feeding high on the priority list. You will probably see breed traits become...


Confidence Building

Confidence Building

“Confidence building” is one of those phrases that gets used a lot in dog training right now. But it’s worth asking—what actually builds confidence? And more importantly, what truly expands a dog’s emotional capacity? From my perspective, confidence doesn’t come from overly controlled environments or carefully staged exercises. It doesn’t come from keeping the dog in a bubble where nothing unpredictable ever happens. Real confidence is built through experience—through the body moving through challenge and coming out the other side. In many ways, confidence is a nervous system experience. It’s not just about what the dog does, but what the...


Behavioral Issues Vs. Genetic Drives

Behavioral Issues Vs. Genetic Drives

Is my dog in a state of drive, or a state of fear? Lately, I’ve been wanting to help people understand that there is a real difference between a dog who has behavioral issues and a dog who is simply acting out his genetics. Behavioral issues, in my mind, are interruptions in a dog’s natural way of being—patterns that create distress for the dog, the owner, and often other animals as well. These are the behaviors we tend to label as reactivity, aggression, hyperactivity, anxiety, obsessive or compulsive patterns, depression, even self-harm. In these cases, the dog is not feeling...


Stop Romanticizing Dogs

Stop Romanticizing Dogs

  All I want for Christmas this year is for everyone (including myself!) to stop romanticizing dogs. Yes, that's right, dogs are not Disney characters. I think we've been weirdly conditioned by movies like "Lady and the Tramp" and "101 Dalmations" to feel that dogs are just like us: They want to live indoors and eat spaghetti, raise their babies among humans, walk through city parks, and enjoy watching TV by the fire as much as we do. Dogs are actually still so closely related to wolves that they can interbreed with them. This, by some opinions, makes them the...

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