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Rescuing a Dog Doesn’t Make You a Good Owner - “It’s a Rescue” Is Not an Excuse.
Rescuing a Dog Is Not the Same as Rehabilitating a Dog This will not be a comfortable topic for everyone, but it is necessary. Rescuing a dog does not automatically mean that dog is now living a healthy, stable, fulfilled life. Adoption is a starting point, not a transformation. If a dog is removed from a chaotic, neglectful, or abusive environment but is not given structure, training, behavioural guidance, and proper fulfilment, then the internal state of that dog often does
Feb 263 min read


Read this if you feel overwhelmed by all the dog training advice you see online
The Problem With Online Dog Training Advice We live in a digital age where information is unlimited. You can open Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, or Facebook and instantly find hundreds of dog trainers telling you what to do. Quick fixes. “Secret methods.” Miracle transformations. On the surface, this looks helpful. In reality, it creates confusion. I see overwhelmed owners every week who have tried five different methods, watched twenty videos, and now don’t know what to believe
Feb 252 min read
Are Reactive Dogs Created by Their Owners?
I have been thinking about this for a long time: are most reactive dogs actually a result of their handlers? My answer is simple. In most cases, yes. 9 out of 10 times, the owner plays a major role in creating or maintaining reactivity. That may sound harsh. But avoidance of truth doesn’t fix behaviour. “My Dog Was Bitten” This is the story I hear constantly. An owner tells me their dog is reactive. I ask what happened. They say their dog was bitten as a puppy or adolescent.
Feb 243 min read
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