Your Dog isn’t the Problem

Dog Blog, Real Life Training, Zelda

It started out like my average Saturday morning: Nothing More sang me awake telling me “everything is better when you’re dreaming”, which also signaled to Zelda that it was time to get up for work. She has learned that the sound of my alarm = going to work.

I let her outside to go pee and then headed to the bathroom myself. I could hear her barking outside; her classic “intruder alert” type of bark. I assumed it was just somebody walking by that she didn’t like the look of. Until the barking persisted. I was growing concerned that her barking would wake my kids up, so I quickly finished up and hurried outside in my bare feet.

There was Zelda, in the middle of the yard. She looked almost relieved to see me. She ran to where I stood on the deck and then back to where she’d been standing in the yard. She did this a few times, looking from me to the back corner of the yard, where the fire pit is. It was all very classic “Lassie” type behavior, and what she was trying to communicate was clear to me: “look! Look over there!”

My eyes followed where she was trying to direct my attention, and then I saw it—the intruder. It was a cat. Just a big fat orange tabby.

I said to Zelda, “It’s a CAT! What are you waiting for? Chase it off! Go get it!” and like a shot she was off. She chased the cat over the fence and hopefully back to its home. After reaching the fence line and finding the cat efficiently out of reach, she trotted back to me with a look of pure satisfaction. She looked so proud of herself, and looked to me to tell her she was the “good dog” she knew she was.

“Great job Zelda,” I told her, “now next time maybe start with that.”

But Zelda isn’t a dog that takes matters into her own paws without input. She isn’t a cattle dog or a guardian breed. She isn’t the lead dog of the team. She’s a “yes man” type of dog—and that’s okay. However, this story has made me think about how a lot of dogs actually operate.

Her job, like all good family dogs, is to let me know when something is wrong. And she did that. She just needed a little bit of direction on what to do next.

Once I really thought about it, I realized Zelda didn’t fumble by not chasing the cat right away. She did exactly what I’ve taught her to do.

When we go for walks and a strange dog approaches, I put Zelda behind me and I handle it. When someone comes to our house, she sounds the alarm and I answer the door. When we’re working at the hotel, she lets me know someone is at the front desk with a gentle “woof”, and I go talk to them.

So of course when a cat shows up in the yard, her first job is the same: tell me.

Dogs come with built-in tendencies influenced by breed and personality. You see it when a Border Collie drops into a stalk over a ball, or when certain dogs are naturally more “alert first, act second.” That doesn’t go away—it just gets shaped.

Barking isn’t random. It’s communication. It’s information. It’s what dogs have been doing for us for thousands of years. Zelda wasn’t barking for no reason. She was doing exactly what she’s been taught to do: get my attention, and then we figure it out together.

So next time your dog is barking, it might not be “shut up” that’s needed. It might just be “okay, what are you telling me?”

Disclaimer: while the photo above is real, the header image at the top of his post is AI generated to help with visual story-telling.

Group Obedience Class

Dog Blog, FSJ Dog Training, Training, Training Workshop, update

This was my first year holding successful group classes and you guys exceeded my expectations. Last year I tried to do a group class and only had one person sign up. This year I thought, “what the heck, throw it out there one more time…” and the response I got was overwhelming. Not only was I able to put on a group class but I was able to put on FIVE of them!

Each class had 4 dogs with their handlers and was held at the United Church. I’m so grateful to the United Church for giving me the chance to hold my classes there. They’ve been accommodating and forgiving (especially of the spring-time dog hair shed about the room). I worked hard to clean the room after each class to help lessen my lease and to show respect towards the Church. All of my students were also very respectful of the space. It turned out to be a great place to run a small class. However, I certainly wouldn’t want more than 4 dogs (and my Zelda) in there. To hold a bigger class comfortably, I would need a bigger space.

Throughout these 5 classes I’ve fine-tuned my methods and curriculum to the point I feel quite confident that the Basic Obedience Workshop is exactly what the average dog owner wants. It’s really more than just a basic obedience class; it’s an “everything you need to know to comfortably live with your dog” class. It covers all of the foundations you need to build strong, reliable obedience.

WEEK ONE: FOUNDATIONS

The class kicks off in week one with Foundations. It starts with a main focus on two of the 5 basic obedience commands: sit and down. Most dogs already know at least one of these by the time they come to my class, but not always.

Other topics covered in this first class are:

leashes and collars
terminology and tips
off vs down
a note on consistency

It’s a lot covered in the first lesson, but all the other classes are built off this first one. As the weeks go on there are less subjects covered in each class because with each subsequent class we are reviewing everything from the previous class, every week. Week One Foundations is definitely a class you don’t want to miss.

WEEK TWO: IMPULSE CONTROL

Impulse control in dogs refers to their ability to resist the urge to act on a desire or instinct and instead choose a more appropriate or desired behavior. For example, stay instead of chase a squirrel. It’s essentially teaching a dog to pause, think and make a more deliberate choice rather than reacting automatically. It’s a skill that is crucial for safety, preventing accidents and enhancing overall training. All dogs could use impulse control training to teach them to think before they act. Heck, most people could use it too. Week two gets right to the nitty gritty of impulse control with a heavy focus on the basic obedience command stay.

Also taught in this class are:

stay circle
jackpot rewards
distractions and challenges

Newly added to this class is also impulse control games! Games you can play with your dog at home that will help them hone their impulse control skills.

WEEK THREE: FOCUS AND RELIABILITY

Week three takes the skills we’ve learned in the first half of the workshop and builds off of them to step it up with one of the most important basic obedience commands that all owners want their dog to learn: come (recall). In this class we teach our dogs to focus on us and what the key is to more reliable obedience.

Also covered in week three’s class:

watch command
automatic sit

WEEK FOUR: REAL WORLD OBEDIENCE

The fourth and final week of this workshop teaches you how to apply all of the skills you learned into the real world and your every-day life. The basic obedience command we focus on last is heel, with an optional “loose-leash walking” for those who don’t really care if their dog walks right beside them, but want them to learn not to pull on the leash. Heel is a great command for learning to navigate the world with your dog as your partner at your side.

Also covered in the last class:

phasing out treats
the key to reliable obedience

JOIN THE WAIT LIST

If you missed out on the fun this spring and would like to be a part of my next obedience class, you can join the wait list and I will contact you once I have a date set for the next class.

JOIN THE WAIT LIST HERE

THANK YOU

I wanted to end this post with a heartfelt THANK YOU to everyone who helped make these 5 group classes a success. My family for putting up with my insane work schedule during that time, and of course, to my clients and their wonderful dogs. Thank you to every person who filled these classes. You all taught me as much as I taught you. I truly enjoyed every moment; every challenge, every celebration, every moment of comradery as we were all in it together. You all made this experience extremely special to me. Last, but certainly not least, I want to thank my beautiful demo dog Zelda. I couldn’t have done this without her by my side every class.