Rufus's Remedies

Rufus's Remedies Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Rufus's Remedies, Pet service, 2200 Campbell Road, Golden, BC.

08/06/2025

We’re hiring! 🐾

Chasin’ Tails is looking for passionate, dog-loving humans to join our team. We’re currently accepting applications for:
– Kennel Attendant
– Dog Groomer
– Front Receptionist

If you’re friendly, dependable, and love being around dogs, we’d love to meet you! Experience required. 🐶

Email your resume to [email protected] or stopping by in person!

I’m so excited for this!
05/10/2025

I’m so excited for this!

The BehavioUr Eh! Conference registration is now officially open. This all Canadian conference which is going to be held here in Calgary Chasin' Tails Dog Care Center, promises to be epic!
This conference is for everyone who is interested in learning more about Animals behaviour. (Animal trainers and behaviourists, Veterinarians and veterinary technicians, Animal welfare professionals, Researchers and academics.)

🇨🇦✌️

04/09/2025

Dogs behave the way they do for many reasons. They don’t act out of stubbornness or a desire to be ‘naughty,’ nor do they try to take control to be the 'pack leader.' Old myths and outdated training approaches harm their well-being and strain the bond between dogs and their caregivers.

🧬 A dog’s breed and genetics shape certain behavioural traits. Genetic predispositions and breed-specific tendencies play a role. Some breeds lean toward behaviours like herding, hunting, or guarding.

The neonatal period and the environment a dog grows up in can impact and influence their emotional responses. Early socialisation period—appropriately exposing puppies using reward-based methods to diverse people, animals, and settings during their key developmental window—builds confidence and shapes emotional regulation, adaptive behaviours, social skills, and reduces fear or aggression later on.

Overstimulation triggers unwanted behaviours by overwhelming a dogs senses. Not enough sleep, loud noises, crowds, or constant busy activity can lead to hyperactivity or erratic/impulsive responses. For example, a dog might jump, bark, or pull on the leash when flooded with too much daily input.

Past experiences and learned consequences shape behaviour. Trauma, especially, can spark fear, anxiety, or aggression.

How caregivers interact and guide their dogs shape their emotional responses and behaviours. Empathy, prevention (environmental management), consistency, and positive reinforcement methods build a more stable and confident dog. Punitive correction-based and intimidation methods can create unpredictability, confusion, and fear, which may lead to aggressive defensive responses.

A dogs health—physical and mental—affects their behaviour. Pain, illness, or discomfort can shift how they act.

Emotions that cause distress, like fear, anxiety, or excessive excitement, drive behaviour or a ‘lack thereof.’ Responses are instinctive and depend on how the dog perceives a threat. They might react defensively (fight), flee to hide (flight), freeze in place, or fawn by showing submissive, appeasing behaviours to de-escalate conflict—like excessive licking or cowering. Some may shut down entirely into learned helplessness after prolonged stress, while others display excessive, out-of-context behaviours (fidgeting), like random ge***al checks, eating grass, scratching, or ‘shaking off.

Unmet mental or physical needs lead to frustration and destruction. A dog with pent-up energy or boredom might chew furniture, dig up the yard, or bark nonstop to release stress.

Diet influences behaviour, too. High-quality nutrition supports steady energy, good mood, and well-being. Poor food choices can cause irritability, hyperactivity, or gut issues.

As dogs age, canine cognitive decline can set in as well as the loss of hearing or eyesight. These changes can lead to increased confusion, disorientation, and altered social interactions in older dogs.

Every dog is unique, and behaviour varies within context, experiences, breeds, and life stages. Dogs express needs, emotions, and intentions through body language, vocalizations, and other signals. Reading these cues gives you insight into their behaviour and how they are feeling, which can help you prevent unwanted situations from happening or help you adjust your approach to challenges.

I’m not humanising dogs—they are sentient beings with emotions (Cambridge Declaration, 2012). Their feelings and needs may not be as layered as ours, but they’re real!

Thanks for reading and learning more about them🐾💜

My babies are up for adoption. Come meet them this weekend at Pet Valu
02/11/2025

My babies are up for adoption. Come meet them this weekend at Pet Valu

12/31/2024

Tonic Immobility is a thing that needs to be better shared and understood by the general public. There are too many (not so) "Funny" videos of animals in this extreme state. There are too many trainers who utilize this as a tool in their training.

It seems all species have the ability to go into "Tonic Immobility" when in extreme fear or shock, or when held in a perceived restraint (held upside down or a sensitive body part is grasped).This is a temporary paralysis, the mind/body shuts down all but basic functioning. This mechanism is used by most species as a "fail-safe" this is a way of removing their consciousness from their body, so they don't need to suffer when they think they're going to die. Prey animals are especially sensitive to this, so they don't need to be aware of being eaten. Humans also experience this, they describe the experience as feeling "De-realized" or "De-personalized", like they're removed from their body, or even from reality as a whole. This sounds like a pretty awful state to be in doesn't it?

Some are ignorant to this and find some of these things funny or magical, "they hypnotized the animal!" This is bad enough, but once knowing, why would anyone do this?

Unfortunately it's common practice in training many species, particularly horses. Horse training frequently involves the use of laying the horse down, tying them out, or using a tool like twitches (as a non-emergency restraint). When you see a trainer with a horse laid down through force, especially laid all the way belly up, with the human climbing on them, you know you're seeing Tonic Immobility. Not expert training or trust. Often at some point they no longer need to tools, whips, or ropes to get the horse to lay down, but you'll see the horse's head turn tight to one side and one foreleg come up before they drop, like when using a rope. As opposed to the behavior being marked and reinforced when it happens naturally, and being put on cue.

After an experience or few of these the individual will begin to sink into a state of "Learned Helplessness". This is a general feeling of helpless/hopelessness, they feel as though they have no control, no ability to escape or avoid the awful or obtain the good. They are without hope. Again, why would anyone want this? Because these animals are especially compliant. They have no fight, no flight, no will, just obedience. This can start focused on one situation (like when one tool is in use or when in a certain environment) but the more experiences of Tonic Immobility the more the Learned Helplessness can generalize.

Once the individual has generalized Learned Helplessness, it can be slow and painful to come out of this state. It can also often cause a major emotional and behavioral relapse/problems. The individual is suddenly aware of a whole world they'd shut out, with no learned skills, behaviors, or even coping mechanisms to protect them. They need to start anew and learn about their world with newly opened eyes.

*** Note on twitches:
We all understand that emergencies happen we weren't prepared or able to prepare for. We all know these tools work to get a job done that must be done. The goal isn't to shame the tool, but rather spread awareness about how and why it works so people can make ethical decisions on when and when not to use it

12/27/2024

🎄MERRY CHRISTMAS!!! 🎄

☃️🐾 Meet Your New Best Friend! 🐾☃️

Introducing Scottie! This lovable guy is like a walking comedy act, sure to fill your home with laughter and happiness. With a heart of gold, he's still perfecting the art of sharing (who needs to share toys, right?). He would shine brightest as the star of an adult-only household, where tiny humans won’t steal his thunder.

Scottie is a social butterfly who makes friends with humans effortlessly, but don’t worry—he’s also working on his manners. With a little patience, he’ll quickly become your BFF (Best Furry Friend, of course!)!

When this charming pup isn’t being adorable, he loves to:

- Go on exciting adventures and explore new surroundings
- Enjoy leisurely runs with his favorite human
- Soak up all the belly rubs (he’s an expert in this area!)
- Play fetch, although he might get sidetracked by squirrels or even his own tail!

If you’re ready for a lifetime filled with laughter, cuddles, and slobbery kisses, this lovable goofball is the ideal companion for you!

Please share this post to help us find Scottie his perfect forever home just in time for Christmas! If you’re interested in adopting Scottie, please fill out an application.

https://halohuskyhaven.org/adoption-application/

05/16/2017

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2200 Campbell Road
Golden, BC

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