Cheeky Dog Obedience Training

Cheeky Dog Obedience Training Cheeky Dog Obedience trains with the cognitive approach to achieve a balanced relationship between y

Cheeky Dog Obedience trains with the cognitive approach to achieve a balanced relationship between you and your dog. The training is effective, stimulating, creative and enjoyable for both handler and dog

Oh, what fun we will have !!  Basic Obedience is already half filled.... don't dawdle, if you want to sign up !
02/28/2026

Oh, what fun we will have !! Basic Obedience is already half filled.... don't dawdle, if you want to sign up !

01/11/2026

Why Tired Dogs Aren’t Necessarily Calm Dogs

“Tire them out” sounds sensible, but it’s one of the most misunderstood bits of dog advice out there.

A tired dog is not automatically a calm dog.

Many exhausted dogs are:
• Wired
• Restless
• Snappy
• Unable to switch off

Why?
Because fatigue without fulfilment lowers impulse control.

The body may be empty, but the brain is still asking,
“What was the point of all that?”

Calm isn’t the absence of energy.
Calm is emotional regulation, predictability, and security.

That doesn’t come from endless walks.

It comes from structured effort followed by taught rest.

Many owners fall into the arousal spiral:
Dog unsettled → more exercise → fitter dog → higher arousal → worse settling → even more exercise.

Result?
A dog that can run ten miles… and can’t lie down for five minutes.

Walks matter, but most have no clear objective or endpoint, so the nervous system never gets the signal to stand down.

Mental work does:
• It creates focus, not frenzy
• It has a clear finish
• It allows the brain to switch off

Stimulation raises arousal.
Satisfaction lowers it.

Dogs don’t need to be entertained.
They need to feel useful.

If your dog can’t settle, stop asking:
“How far should I walk them?”

Start asking:
“What did I give their brain to do today and did I show them when it was finished?”

That’s where calm actually lives.

Today could be a new beginning of a better relationship with your dog ❤
01/04/2026

Today could be a new beginning of a better relationship with your dog ❤

Happy New Year !  Let's start the New Year off with deepening your relationship with your dog and having fun with your d...
12/28/2025

Happy New Year ! Let's start the New Year off with deepening your relationship with your dog and having fun with your dog !

12/21/2025
Wishing everyone a holiday season of peace
12/17/2025

Wishing everyone a holiday season of peace

I am so grateful for everyone who donated to the Cheeky Dog Obedience Pet Food Drive to help keep their pets in the home...
11/30/2025

I am so grateful for everyone who donated to the Cheeky Dog Obedience Pet Food Drive to help keep their pets in the homes that love them ❤. We raised 389 pounds of food that will be donated to the Foothills Food Bank this week !!! Thank you everyone and thank you to everyone who was unable to contribute but keeps these pets and their families in their hearts and prayers during this difficult time. You all ROCK !!!!!

A very good article...please take a few minutes to read.
11/17/2025

A very good article...please take a few minutes to read.

I often joke that raising a dog is a lot like raising a child—except my daughter has yet to destroy an entire roll of toilet paper for fun, and none of my dogs have ever demanded a rainbow-inspired birthday party… yet. But if you’ve ever watched a toddler and a puppy side-by-side, the similarities are uncanny. Both have zero impulse control, and both genuinely believe that anything in the environment is a potential invitation for exploration, adventure, or mild chaos—especially if you look away for half a second.

And here’s the thing: most of us would never dream of raising our children the way many people unintentionally raise their dogs. Let me explain.

When my daughter was two, imagine me handing her a multi-pack of permanent markers and saying, “Sweetie, you’re smart. I trust you. Don’t draw on anything important.” Then turning around to make a cup of tea. Thirty seconds later, she would have created a mural that Banksy himself would applaud—on the living room wall. Would my reaction have been: “She’s so stubborn!” “She’s over-aroused!” “She has a predisposition to artistic defiance!” Of course not. She was a child. Children need guidance, boundaries, and supervision (and ideally, washable markers).

And somewhere around this stage—whether with the child or the puppy—comes one of the biggest misunderstandings people have: the idea that the puppy actually “knows” something. People say, “But he knows sit,” or “She knows this at home,” but what they really mean is the puppy can do it when nothing else is going on. The second you add the real world—leaves blowing, birds flapping, kids laughing, smells wafting in from six miles away—the environment becomes the most fascinating thing on the planet. In the early stages, the environment will always win. Every. Single. Time. That’s not the puppy being naughty or stubborn—it’s simply nature. Our job is to help them navigate distractions, guide them through chaos, and gradually become the most interesting and safe place for them to anchor themselves. Without that support, the world becomes one giant, irresistible playground they are absolutely not equipped to handle on their own.

Fast forward to my daughter being older—if I gave her unrestricted access to desserts, let her stay up as late as she wanted, go out with friends whenever she felt like it, and make all her own decisions at a young age, we all know what would happen. Questionable judgment. Meltdowns. Sugar-fuelled chaos. A total disregard for structure. And we’d all agree that the issue wouldn’t be her personality… it would be my parenting approach.

Yet this is exactly what happens with dogs all the time. People bring home an adorable puppy with fluff, charm, and the cognitive ability of a damp sponge, and then give them free access to the entire house, let them rehearse chasing the cat “just once” (which turns into twice… and then twenty times), allow them to greet every stranger like an enthusiastic debt collector, expect them to magically “know better,” and then act surprised when the dog begins to make poor choices—daily, enthusiastically, and with full commitment. Suddenly the labels start flying: “He’s reactive.” “She’s over-aroused.” “He’s stubborn.” “She’s got no impulse control.”

But the reality is far simpler and far less dramatic: the dog is responding exactly how any young creature would respond—with the information, experiences, and freedoms they’ve been given.

Puppyhood is childhood, just with more fur. If a child grows up with intentional structure, healthy boundaries, and appropriate experiences, they develop into a confident, capable human. If instead they grow up with overwhelming freedom, chaotic environments, and zero guidance… well, the journey gets bumpy. Dogs are no different.

Before we label a dog as “difficult,” we should ask ourselves: What experiences have we exposed them to? What environments have we allowed them to rehearse behaviour in? Have we set them up to succeed? Have we actually taught them the skills to make good choices—or just hoped they’d somehow figure it out?

Dogs don’t magically absorb correct behaviour through osmosis. They’re not born understanding polite greetings, impulse control, or the nuanced art of “perhaps don’t launch yourself at the elderly neighbour holding shopping bags.” They learn from us—just as our children do. When we raise our dogs with the same intentionality we use to raise our children, we create dogs who are confident instead of chaotic, thoughtful instead of accidental, and able to navigate the world calmly rather than being overwhelmed. And we become owners who can confidently say, “Yes, my dog is brilliant,” instead of, “He’s just a bit… erm… enthusiastic… sorry… he’s friendly, I promise!”

Thoughtful upbringing leads to thoughtful behaviour—every single time. Puppyhood is not something to merely “survive.” It’s something to curate. Because when we invest in those early moments, we’re not just teaching our dog how to behave… we’re shaping who they’ll become. And trust me—wall art is a lot easier to avoid when you don’t hand the puppy the metaphorical permanent markers in the first place.

So tell me—what do you do to intentionally raise your puppy to be a great adult dog?

Our first week people donated a little over 100 # of pet food because they love their pets and understand the need to ke...
11/09/2025

Our first week people donated a little over 100 # of pet food because they love their pets and understand the need to keep pets with their people. We will be collecting donations through November. Please consider donating during this time of need, even if it is just a can or two. All donations will be donated to the Foothills Food Bank. Thank you and if you need me to pick up your donation, please email me at [email protected]. ❤

11/02/2025

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32007 N. 45th Street
Cave Creek, AZ
85331

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