WOOF! Management Is the Secret to Success

Welcome to the second WOOF Support Blog Hop. This month’s theme is Success, Frustration, and Everything In Between. Reactive dog trainers talk about “setting your dog up for success.” To me, that means careful management. Generally, I do not consider Leo a fearful dog, but he is extremely leash-reactive. After what we went through withContinue reading “WOOF! Management Is the Secret to Success”

How to train a dog to do anything (and prevent bites)

I read Ian Dunbar’s Before and After Getting Your Puppy before and after we got Leo. Unfortunately, I had not yet heard about puppy socialization when we got Isis, whose story I tell in Bark and Lunge. That’s why, after reading an advance copy of my book, Ian Dunbar said: Prospective puppy/dog owners can save themselves aContinue reading “How to train a dog to do anything (and prevent bites)”

The Good Dog Park v. The Bad Dog Park

There are lots of reasons not to take your dog to a dog park, and most of these have two legs and spend their time texting when they should be watching their dogs. But sometimes, especially when it’s cold and rainy and your dog barks and lunges when he’s on a leash, you really justContinue reading “The Good Dog Park v. The Bad Dog Park”

WOOF! Working Out Our Fears

Where were all the Fearful Dog support groups when I was struggling with Isis? Did they not exist, or did I not understand until way too late that fear was the root of her problem? Social media was still young then, way back in 2008. I’m part of two great Facebook communities where every day,Continue reading “WOOF! Working Out Our Fears”

Me and my exceptionally healthy dogs

This post was supposed to be about my volunteer orientation at the Humane Society, but I had a crazy sore throat on Friday, and had to sleep all day Saturday (missing the orientation for this month) to rid myself of the cold demon. It worked, but made for a bummer of a weekend, especially sinceContinue reading “Me and my exceptionally healthy dogs”

Mia the secret destroyer

We’ve had Mia since June 2011. We believe she is nine years old. For the first two years we had her, she did not do a single thing wrong. The only things she tore apart were her own toys. She did display a few anxious tendencies: An occasional shrill whine we dubbed “squeak squeak whistleContinue reading “Mia the secret destroyer”