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  • Home
  • About
    • Meet Laura
    • Family Dog Mediation
    • Media
    • Miss Behavior Recommends
  • Blog
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    • Behavior Help Options
    • Private Training Options
    • Dog Tutoring: Training & Enrichment done for you
    • Virtual Membership
  • Membership
    • Membership
    • Login
  • Courses & Freebies
    • All Courses
    • FREE Boredom Buster Recipes
    • COURSE: Building Resilience in your Family Dog
    • COURSE: Managing the Leash Walk
    • Potty Training COURSE
    • Paws Off COURSE
    • COURSE: Managing the Leash Walk
    • FREE Attention Building Challenge
    • FREE Scratchboard Training
    • FREE Rest and Recovery Round-Up
    • FREE Body Language 101
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C.A.R.E Focused Education for Dogs & Their People

Inspiring Curiosity, Agency, Reflection, & Empathy

11/10/2020 0 Comments

My favorite training tool

Do you know what my favorite training tool is?
I'll give you a few hints...
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  • It helps prevent jumping
  • It prevents your pups from attacking your kids when they move too fast
  • It prevents reinforcing the wrong behaviors
  • It helps with counter surfing issues
  • It keeps puppies safe
  • It's something that dogs really like to get away from, if not accustomed to it...
  • One downside... It's a tempting reason for cats to chase your pup

One tool that does all those things must be pretty expensive and special right?


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11/5/2020 0 Comments

Does your dog put everything in his mouth?

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Whether you have a puppy, a teenager, or an adult dog playing the game of keep-away with what he found, you have two choices in the moment

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You could jump on Path A: Catch your dog, take the item, and put it away or throw it away
or... 
You could jump on Path B: Grab a treat, offer it to your dog in exchange for what he stole, and then take the item

Where does Path A take you?
Where does Path B take you?
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They go in two very different directions!

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10/31/2020 0 Comments

Reasons why your dog keeps jumping

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Boing, Boing, Boing! 🤦‍♀️ Does that describe your dog?

I hear it all the time.
My dog won't stop jumping on me when I walk in the door.
My dog gets so excited to see people and jumps all over them.
My dog started stealing things off the counter now that he's big enough.
I feel like I'm constantly pushing my dog off of me.


While it's not a new problem for me to hear about, when you're in it, it can feel very overwhelming, embarrassing, and like you somehow created this problem...

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10/28/2020 0 Comments

Uncomplicate the behavior

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What do Lego bricks have to do with dog training?

 You can take a big behavior that you want to work on and pretend like it's a Lego creation.
Within your giant Lego creation, you can take this really big behavior and if you just teach the little pieces, you're soon able to put that big behavior back together again.
It's really solid because it has a really nice foundation to it.



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9/8/2020 0 Comments

My Pandemic Pivot - The Full Story

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Watch the Replay
I love serving the world by teaching. Teaching is my truest passion, whether by teaching dog behavior one-on-one or on a larger scale.
I started my business in 2008 but what I do now looks very different from what I did back then. 
Now, I have two kids, ages 6 and 8, and since having them I moved from teaching group classes (in the evenings and on weekends) to focusing on one-on-one training. Prior to the Pandemic, I would travel from home to home while they were in school. I would work directly with clients and I had also developed a program where I could do much of the training with the dog while people were at work. 
In March 2020, I went to a training conference, one I had been looking forward to for months. I was in KY for 2 days and on the day the conference was due to have their opening ceremony, they canceled. Needless to say, I was both selfishly devastated and also had no idea what was to come. I couldn't get a flight home for another 2 days. I decided to self-quarantine for 2 weeks while my kids began their virtual schooling. That's where it all began...
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9/12/2019 0 Comments

Nail Trimming Issues?

One of the #1 complaints and struggles I hear about through working at the vet's office is that their dog HATES nail clipping!
Why do dogs hate it? It's a lot of pressure on them. Their paw pads are pushed on, the nail clippers work by squeezing their nail (especially if dull!), sometimes we hit the nerve before hitting the quick, sometimes we hit the nerve AND the quick (the blood supply), then we mess with putting powder on their foot. We insist on cutting all the nails at once. They're often held in positions they are not comfortable in. We stress out. Shall I go on? 

So let's solve some of that problem, shall we?
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9/3/2019 0 Comments

My own reactive dog

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All Behavior Competition Dock Dogs Dog Dog Training Kids Kids And Dogs Management Muzzle

The trainer's dog. What's your expectation? Good manners. A perfect stay, a rock solid recall, a happy-go-lucky, well-socialized, perfect advocate for my training skills and services?

Let me introduce you to my dog. Meet Willow.
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Willow is my dog-reactive, kid-reactive, work-boot reactive, cat chasing, wild girl. Does that mean she's aggressive? No. It means she gets emotional in those circumstances. It means she has some trouble controlling her arousal level when triggered by the above. 

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So why is she wearing a muzzle?
Because I can't trust others to have their dogs always under control. Because I wanted to take her for a walk, safely, in an area that sometimes has a reputation for dogs on the loose, despite all the signs that tell you to leash your dog. Because she fought with my other dog in the past, to the point of injury. Because she doesn't always make safe choices. But most of all, because it GIVES HER FREEDOM. Yes, her muzzle offers her freedom. It gives me confidence in knowing that she won't be able to make a impulsive poor choice and injure anyone with her teeth, so I'm much more willing to take her out and about. 
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Do you know what other freedom it gives her? ​

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8/4/2016 1 Comment

Day Training with Annie: Leash Reactivity

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4/6/2016 1 Comment

Kids and Dogs... The realities of raising them together

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Have you ever thought of your dogs as your kids? Or maybe you brought home a puppy and are cursing yourself, thinking it's like having a baby all over again and another baby wasn't in the plans. Well, me too. 

Now, don't get me wrong - if you had asked me pre-kids whether I thought getting a dog would be like having another kid, I would've said ABSOLUTELY. Ask me now and I'll even more enthusiastically say ABSOLUTELY!! 
Gosh. having dogs and young kids is hard work! 

I have a daughter who is just about 4 going on 16. She's smart, (often too smart for me), driven, emotional, sensitive, eager to please, driven, stubborn. A border collie of sorts. Then I have a 20 month old. He's loud, always moving, equally stubborn, slow to warm up, clumsy, attention seeking, clingy, smart. A German Shepherd, by my classification. And then, lets see - there's Cora, who is 5. She really is a dog. She hates men, barks at trucks, likes to chase squirrels, but she's great on leash, and really great with other dogs. There's Felix. He's 9, going on 2. He is food driven to an aggressive degree if he weren't kept in check. He pees on everything, has a sensitive stomach, is sensitive to the touch, will bark at strangers and protect the house if I'm not home and then will love on them and shed all over them when I bring them in. Oh, and he's defensive around new dogs until he realizes they're not all like his older "brother". That brings us to Fletcher. He is 10, also going on about 4. He knows all kinds of tricks, is excessively smart, but is a bully to other dogs. Not aggressive, just a bully. He will stand his ground, will posture as necessary and doesn't back down. He'll get into a fight if the other dog also wants to stand his ground but has GREAT bite inhibition (the wonderful trait that separates dogs from the bully category to the vicious killer category when they scare with their teeth vs maul with their teeth). Finally, last but not least. There's Milo. He's a cat. He will find food anywhere, acts like a dog, doesn't learn quickly (I can't tell you how many times ive climbed into bed on TOP of him just for him to go sprinting out). 

Phew. I'm exhausted just mentioning everyone. I love my animals.. All of them, I do. They all have their strengths and weaknesses. But my goodness, having dogs and kids in the same household. Management skills need to be top notch! And my kids and dogs are great together. They all love my kids. My kids were taught from day one not to steal toys or bones from them, not to climb on them, not to pull tails, etc etc. My son is in the stage now of thinking any attention is funny and often having to learn things the hard way. But since crawling on or using my dogs as a step stool is not an option, no matter how much they seem to "not mind", guess what? He gets a lot of time outs, and so do the dogs. They still go in their crates for down time, mine and theirs. 

Fletcher has recently been randomly taking off to explore the back woods of where we're staying, so guess who gets a long line when going outside again? Until I can work on the behavior, management. I can't go get him when it's just the kids and me at home, and rather than allowing him to scour the neighbors yards for some doggy friends... Leash. Sorry, kid. 10 years old and back on the leash like when he was a teenager. Hey, my dogs aren't perfect. Almost half their life or more, they've had to share with infants, babies, toddlers, a preschooler. And these are dogs that were here first, with a mild (Cora) to moderate amount of time spent training them. And that's with me knowing what to do, knowing how to read them, knowing how to respond to them. I'm not the average dog owner.

Management is an ESSENTIAL skill with all dogs because your dog, too, will have strengths and weaknesses. Maybe he's really great on leash but has a really poor recall because you live in an area where it's just not safe to practice off-leash training. I'm not all high and mighty and going to tell you that you'll be able to do it all. Raise kids, have a perfectly behaved dog. That's a hobby. Train what you can and what you need to, manage the rest. Maybe your days will get less hectic and you can do more of the former and will need less of the latter. But maybe not. Maybe you want your dog to clean up your kids crumbs under the table but don't want a dog who begs. Well.......you have 3 options. He can beg (granted, he can be trained to lay down and not be drooling in your lap) and get the food. He can learn not to beg and never get the food, or he can be crated, gated, MANAGED and then given clean up duty. That's life. Life with kids and dogs? It's HARD!

Anyways, that's my spiel for today. Hang in there with me!



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www.familypaws.com
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    Miss Behavior

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    Positive, practical, playful methods

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