My Dog Ate A Sock And Peed On The Van Bed, Yet We’re Still Good Trainers
Fri Feb 06 2026
Some dogs power through thresholds like a freight train. Others melt into perfect heel the second they get nervous. We spent the week working both ends of that spectrum and came home with a message worth underlining: great training adapts to the dog and the human, not the latest trend.
We break down the big “training camps”—balanced, force-free, compulsion—and then move past labels to the skills that matter: clean markers, tight criteria, smart reinforcement, and fair corrections. You’ll hear how we slowed a pushy young German Shepherd at crate doors and equipment time, turning impulse into patience with structured thresholds. Then we flip the script with an obedient XL bully whose reactivity lives under a shiny heel. Instead of pouring on more obedience, we use flexi walks, loose leash drills, and directional changes to build confidence and decision-making away from the handler.
Along the way, we talk tools and timing, handler tension that travels down the leash, and why some dogs need more management—crate and rotate, rest, and routine—while others thrive with freedom. We share practical leash rules that let a dog look without lingering, redirect before the explosion, and reward choices that signal emotional change. We also explain why rehearsing the same tough loop every day stalls progress, and how variety—neutral dog reps, adventure board and trains, detection games—creates new wins and better state of mind.
If you’re tired of cookie-cutter advice or feeling guilty when your dog backslides, this conversation will recalibrate your expectations and your plan. There is no finish line, just evolving standards, sharper basics, and a growing toolkit that fits the dog in front of you. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s stuck on reactivity, and leave a review to help more owners find a better path.
Visit us on the website here to see what we've got going on and how you can join our pack of good dogs and owners.
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Some dogs power through thresholds like a freight train. Others melt into perfect heel the second they get nervous. We spent the week working both ends of that spectrum and came home with a message worth underlining: great training adapts to the dog and the human, not the latest trend. We break down the big “training camps”—balanced, force-free, compulsion—and then move past labels to the skills that matter: clean markers, tight criteria, smart reinforcement, and fair corrections. You’ll hear how we slowed a pushy young German Shepherd at crate doors and equipment time, turning impulse into patience with structured thresholds. Then we flip the script with an obedient XL bully whose reactivity lives under a shiny heel. Instead of pouring on more obedience, we use flexi walks, loose leash drills, and directional changes to build confidence and decision-making away from the handler. Along the way, we talk tools and timing, handler tension that travels down the leash, and why some dogs need more management—crate and rotate, rest, and routine—while others thrive with freedom. We share practical leash rules that let a dog look without lingering, redirect before the explosion, and reward choices that signal emotional change. We also explain why rehearsing the same tough loop every day stalls progress, and how variety—neutral dog reps, adventure board and trains, detection games—creates new wins and better state of mind. If you’re tired of cookie-cutter advice or feeling guilty when your dog backslides, this conversation will recalibrate your expectations and your plan. There is no finish line, just evolving standards, sharper basics, and a growing toolkit that fits the dog in front of you. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s stuck on reactivity, and leave a review to help more owners find a better path. Visit us on the website here to see what we've got going on and how you can join our pack of good dogs and owners.