Kenora & District Dog Club

Kenora & District Dog Club We are a group of people who are involved with various dog sports and activities such as conformatio

Kenora & District Dog Club is an All-Breed Dog Club, recognized by the Canadian Kennel Club. We offer obedience and rally obedience classes of all levels throughout the year to both members and non-members. Please send us a message or contact Crystal Friesen if you are interested. Every year in June, the Club holds a dog show featuring conformation shows, obedience trials, and rally obedience tria

ls. Our members are active in agility, conformation, obedience, skijoring, lure coursing and rally obedience. The club holds meetings once per month, and offers mat time once per week. President: Darlene Literovich
Vice-President: Erica Johnson
Secretary: Crystal Friesen
Treasurer: Donna Hansen

Please message us if you are interested in becoming a member of the Kenora & District Dog Club.

SharingThunder Bay clubs, if you can pass info that direction
08/18/2025

Sharing
Thunder Bay clubs, if you can pass info that direction

I have been informed that a 6 month old Basenji in Brandon needs rescuing. The owner has run into health issues and can no longer care for the dog. The dog is healthy and CKC registered. Please reach out to me if you or anyone you know would be interested in rescuing this dog.

Congratulations to club member Erica and her Nova Scotia Duck Toller “Wave” on their Best Baby Puppy in Show win at the ...
08/14/2025

Congratulations to club member Erica and her Nova Scotia Duck Toller “Wave” on their Best Baby Puppy in Show win at the North Shore Dog Show!

Congratulations to club member Nancy and her Saluki “Gibson” on their Group 1st and two Group 2nd wins at the North Shor...
08/14/2025

Congratulations to club member Nancy and her Saluki “Gibson” on their Group 1st and two Group 2nd wins at the North Shore Dog Show!

Congratulations to club member Darlene and her Welsh Terrier “Nicholas” on their group 4th and best puppy in group win a...
08/13/2025

Congratulations to club member Darlene and her Welsh Terrier “Nicholas” on their group 4th and best puppy in group win at he North Shore Dog Show!

Olivia the Labrador also finished her Canadian Championship this past weekend.

Congratulations to club member Alexis and her Labrador “Winnie” on their successful weekend at the North Shore Dog Show....
08/13/2025

Congratulations to club member Alexis and her Labrador “Winnie” on their successful weekend at the North Shore Dog Show. Winnie now has her Grand Champion Bronze title with a nice Best of Breed win!

08/13/2025
Best of luck to all heading to the North Shore Dog Show.  Safe travels.
08/07/2025

Best of luck to all heading to the North Shore Dog Show. Safe travels.

MINDSET MONDAY

It isn't that we are suggesting that you shouldn't want to win, only that winning shouldn't consume you. That you having a good time and enjoying yourself shouldn't be dependent on whether or not you win. It's about enjoying the time with friends, with your dog and having fun participating in a sport that you love.

Don't let toxic people, judging you disagree with or anything else affect YOU having a good time with your dog!

This!Without a proper foundation, your house falls down.  Without a proper training  foundation, your relationship with ...
08/07/2025

This!
Without a proper foundation, your house falls down. Without a proper training foundation, your relationship with your dog falls apart.

Congratulations KDDC club member!
08/02/2025

Congratulations KDDC club member!

Congratulations to club member Erica and her Toller, “Loon” on a great weekend at the North American Dock Diving Competi...
07/28/2025

Congratulations to club member Erica and her Toller, “Loon” on a great weekend at the North American Dock Diving Competition in St.Andrews, MB. They earned 4 qualifying jumps towards their Dock Novice and Dock Junior title. Loon’s best jump was 11’! 🌊

For your information
07/26/2025

For your information

07/25/2025

Let’s Talk Entitlement: Your Dog Is Not the Centre of the Universe (And Neither Are You)

Right, let’s get a few things straight from the off:
Your dog is not a human. It doesn’t think like a human, speak like a human, or interpret the world in the way we do. And guess what? That’s not a fault, it’s a fact.

There’s a growing trend among some dog owners to treat their dogs like entitled little toddlers, fuelled by this fluffy notion that “they just want to say hi” or “they’re friendly”. That’s lovely… until your “friendly” off-lead dog barrels up to a dog that’s nervous, reactive, working, injured, or just plain wants to be left alone.

Your Dog Is Not Entitled to Say Hello to Everyone

Let’s put it bluntly: your dog doesn’t need to greet every person or dog it sees. You don’t wave and say hello to every stranger in Tesco, do you? (And if you do, people probably cross the aisle to avoid you.)

Dogs are the same. Some are social butterflies, others are more reserved, and some are just trying to keep their heads down and cope with the world. When you let your dog run up to another without permission, you’re not being nice, you’re being selfish. And you’re setting your dog up to get told off, either by the other dog, the handler, or both.

Puppy Classes and the Myth of Mass Socialisation

Doing puppy classes in group settings where every pup is allowed to run around and say hello to everything that moves? You’re laying the groundwork for a dog that thinks every encounter is a party. That’s not socialisation. That’s overstimulation. You’re teaching them that the presence of another dog or person means “excitement” rather than neutrality or calmness.

Later down the line, when your adolescent dog loses its rag every time it sees another dog, you’ll wonder why. Spoiler: it’s because you taught them to.

Let’s Talk Leads and Recall

If you don’t have a reliable recall on your dog, don’t let them off the lead. Simple. There’s no grey area here. A dog without recall is a loose cannon. If you can’t call them away from a squirrel, jogger, cyclist, or another dog, then keep them on a lead or long line until you’ve put the work in. Freedom is earned, not assumed.

Having a dog is a responsibility. It’s not a right to do whatever you fancy and assume everyone else will tolerate it. The world doesn’t revolve around you or your dog.

Respect Others. Control Your Dog.

You’ve no idea what that other dog is going through. It might be reactive, fearful, recovering from surgery, or in training. The person handling that dog might be managing trauma, anxiety, or just trying to enjoy a quiet walk. Your dog doesn’t get to invade that space just because you think they’re “friendly”.

If your dog lunges at others, pulls you down the street, barks at every passer-by, or flattens small children with glee, it’s not “cute”. It’s a lack of training. Own it, fix it, and stop making excuses.

The Bottom Line

Your dog is a dog. Not a fur baby. Not a social ambassador. Not a therapy dog in training because you read a Facebook post that said it has a “healing energy”.

Train it. Lead it. Be its advocate. And above all else, be respectful of the space and comfort of others.

Because your dog may be part of your world, but it’s not the centre of everyone else’s.

www.k9manhuntscotland.co.uk



Address

Kenora, ON
P0X

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Kenora & District Dog Club posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share