Ahimsa Dog Training - Palmer, Alaska

Ahimsa Dog Training - Palmer, Alaska Effective, science-based, LIMA animal training and behavior modification for multiple species. Education
Arizona State University 2006
B.S.

Psychology with a Minor in Life Science
Related coursework:
Animal Behavior
Vertebrate Zoology
Memory and Cognition
Sensation and Perception

Animal Behavior Institute 2012
Coursework:
Canine Behavior and Enrichment
Animal Training
The Human-Animal Bond
Animal Assisted Therapy

Canine Correspondence Studies 2021
Basic, Intermediate, Advanced Dog Training
Dog Behavior Therapy
Dog Aggression Therapy



Workshops and Conferences
Conferences
-Animal Behavior Management Alliance Conference (ABMA)- 2007 / 2024
-The Lemonade Conference An International Gathering of the Best in Dog Sports, Training, and Behavior – 2021
-The Loose Leash Academy: Aggression in Dogs Conference 2021
-Kindness is not on Option Conference 2021
-Avian Behavior International - AvOCET 2024 Bird Training Conference
-Animal Behavior Management Alliance (ABMA) - 2024 Conference

Recent Workshops
-ZAA Professional Development: Advanced Animal Training Strategies
-ILLIS Animal Behaviour Courses - Advanced Animal Training Concepts Masterclass

-Dr. Ian Dunbar’s SIRIUS Dog Trainer Academy
-Dr. Ian Dunbar’s Growl Class- A Workshop for Reactive Dogs
-Dr. Ian Dunbar’s Science-Based Dog Training Workshops
-Dr. Ian Dunbar’s Crucial Concepts in Dog Behavior and Training
-Dr. Ian Dunbar’s Simple Solutions for Common Dog Behavior snacks Training Problems
-Inside Your Dog’s Mind Workshop with Victoria Stilwell
-Animal Reiki Practitioner Certification with Krishna N. Sharma Ph.D.
-Reliability and Games – 2 day Dog Training Workshop
-Cat Behavior Course Workshop with Anneleen Bro

Professional Associations

ABMA - Animal Behavior Management Alliance

Alaska Falconer's Association

IAABC – International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants, Supporting Member

It's Sunday Funday! Let's see your cute pup pictures!
04/24/2022

It's Sunday Funday! Let's see your cute pup pictures!

It's Sunday Funday, let's see some cute dog pictures!
04/24/2022

It's Sunday Funday, let's see some cute dog pictures!

Happy Easter everyone! What breed group does your dog belong to? I'll go first in the comments!👇
04/17/2022

Happy Easter everyone!

What breed group does your dog belong to?

I'll go first in the comments!👇

It is Dog Bite Prevention Week - watching for these signs in your dog and dogs you meet can prevent a bite! Here is anot...
04/14/2022

It is Dog Bite Prevention Week - watching for these signs in your dog and dogs you meet can prevent a bite! Here is another great graphic that explains your dog's behavior leading to a bite.

Please message me with any questions or to get scheduled for some dog training or behavior consultation.

A great graphic on socialization! I will say that all of the socialization that includes meeting a new person or animal ...
04/13/2022

A great graphic on socialization! I will say that all of the socialization that includes meeting a new person or animal should be supervised and controlled to ensure the puppy is not fearful or overwhelmed! You are your dogs advocate and protector, keeping each interaction positive and relaxed will grow your pup's confidence and trust in you.

With an estimated population of nearly 85 million dogs living in U.S. households, millions of people—most of them childr...
04/13/2022

With an estimated population of nearly 85 million dogs living in U.S. households, millions of people—most of them children—are bitten by dogs every year. The majority of these bites, if not all, are preventable. Check out these tips on avoiding a situation that could lead to a bite.

What about headcollars?“Head collars are a bit of a controversial topic, to say the least. Being a scent hound guardian,...
03/31/2022

What about headcollars?

“Head collars are a bit of a controversial topic, to say the least. Being a scent hound guardian, and bearing in the mind the typical nose down, tail up, hearing off scenario that many hound guardians are so familiar with, head collars are often recommended by pet hound owners as a quick fix to stop pulling, with many swearing by them. While they possibly have greater control of their dog in a head collar, the question has to be asked: why do dogs stop pulling when wearing one? The simple answer is that wearing a head collar makes it uncomfortable to pull, therefore the behaviour is punished and suppressed. Most styles of head collar function by tightening and placing tension on the dog’s face and neck until they relieve that pressure by walking next to their human.

There appears to be only one study in existence which compares the physical effects of the use of a head collar versus a harness, but the data may be flawed due to a lack of conditioning of the equipment prior to use. However, the risk of damage to the body through pulling or lunging, coupled with the fact that most function by tightening on the head and face to stop pulling, is sufficient evidence for me not to consider using one.

Thankfully, there has been a recent shift in the dog training world, and there is a greater awareness now of canine emotional needs.

If your dog is pulling on the lead, the first consideration should be to examine *why* he is pulling, rather than simply focussing on trying to stop it. Pulling can occur for many reasons, including:

A lack of training to walk on a loose lead.

Wanting to walk at a faster pace than their slow-coach human.

Overexcitement, frustration, or fearfulness.

Struggling to cope with their environment.

If you are having difficulty with loose lead walking, there is a great free course from the wonderful Canine Principles, which you can find here: Stop Your Dog Pulling - Free Online Workshop. (canineprinciples.com)

Photo & Excerpt from the article:
Walkies Wear: What the Science Says
https://www.trailiepawsforthought.com/post/walkies-wear-what-the-science-says

See also :
Headcollar vs Harness - which is better for our dogs' welfare? - Dogs Today Magazine
https://dogstodaymagazine.co.uk/2020/05/18/headcollar-vs-harness-which-is-better-for-our-dogs-welfare/

This image of the blood vessels in a dog’s face reveals how sensitive their muzzles must truly be:

Don't force your puppy to cry it out in the crate. Informative write up by Emma JudsonCry It Out – Why What We Learned f...
03/27/2022

Don't force your puppy to cry it out in the crate.

Informative write up by Emma Judson

Cry It Out – Why What We Learned from Children Applies to Puppies.

There has since at least 1913, been a school of thought that suggests allowing tiny babies to ‘cry it out’, ie, cry until they give up crying, with the parent no longer responding to cries for attention, comfort or contact, is beneficial or indeed, necessary in raising children.

Somewhere along the line this also became the advice applied to puppies, with the warnings that if you did respond to a pups cries for attention, you would as with the child oriented version of this advice, create a needy individual who was insecure and lacking in confidence.

We now know the opposite is true, unfortunately from a dog perspective very few studies are done on dogs, simply because there isn’t the money in it to do them.

So we are left to extrapolate from studies done on children, but that’s actually ok, because a dogs brain is very comparable to the brain of a child under 2 years of age. They have similar needs for comfort, warmth, food, physical contact, social support. They have similar difficulties in communicating orally, in lacking impulse control and lacking fine motor skills.

So here’s the grim truth.

Young mammals left to ‘cry it out’ do not ‘self soothe’. In fact what they learn (Bowlby J. 1960’s) is that after going through a cycle of protestation, then despair, they reach a third phase of detachment – in effect they give up trying to get a response, get comfort or contact and become apathetic. Their distress is still present, they simply have learned it will not be alleviated as a result of their behaviour, they have shut down.

Whilst the theory ran that if you provide attention constantly so that the young mammal in question does not need to cry, or you respond promptly to their cries, they will cry more, seek attention more… in fact the opposite is true.

A study in 1986 demonstrated that the more the mother holds and carries her baby, the less that baby will cry and fuss. Other studies (cross cultural but still human, not dog) showed that those parents who responded quicker to crying babies also have babies who cry far less often!

Going back to puppies – we have taken them from their mothers, their litter mates and their familiar environment.

If we compare our domestic dog to feral and wild dog populations we see that our domestic puppies experience this separation from their primary care giver and litter mates at (on average) between 6 and 12 weeks of age.
Their wild/feral counter parts are in the constant company of litter mates and the near constant company of their parent until weaning. Beyond weaning, they are still in the constant company of littermates, parent and other relatives unless they choose to be alone, which is unlikely to happen before adolescence and the hormonal changes that are related to adolescence.

It is true that domestic dogs and wild or feral canids are not the same, but the difference is that domestic dogs actively want to be with humans rather than with other canids.

That being so, they are in no way equipped to be isolated and alone, any more than the feral or wild dogs would be.

So what are the risks of subjecting a puppy to isolation from a social group or new primary caregiver,and ignoring cries for company, comfort or contact?

* The increased cortisol levels can actually damage or kill off neurons and the neuronal interconnections – this can affect how well your dog copes with stress, anxiety and fear in future, predisposing them to be more reactive and fearful.

*Stress hormones go up faster than they come back down – so that stressful experience is affecting the dog for much longer than you might think. Possibly days.

*Repeatedly putting stress hormones up will inhibit learning, affect sleep, affect bonding and attachment.

*Repeated stressful experiences that the subject cannot escape from leads to PTSD in humans – we have no evidence to suggest that this does not also happen in dogs. Given the similarities between the human and canine brain, it is reasonable to assume dogs can also experience something similar to PTSD.

The short version of all this is – there is no benefit to leaving a dog to cry it out, separation anxiety is normal for puppies, they need to be with someone most of the time!

Separation anxiety as an abnormal behavioural issue comes about as a result of an insecure dog, who has not been taught how to cope by themselves, not as a result of creating a secure, confident dog who is given what they need as a puppy.

©Emma Judson

❤ Not only is this stage vitally important, our perception of this stage is equally important.
03/20/2022

❤ Not only is this stage vitally important, our perception of this stage is equally important.

There is huge power and potential in your Dog at this critical and challenging stage of life.

Helping them transition from awkward to adulthood can be difficult. It’s also a privilege.

When our dogs hear our cues but are too excited, tired, or distracted to respond with their thinking-brain - our cue wor...
03/13/2022

When our dogs hear our cues but are too excited, tired, or distracted to respond with their thinking-brain - our cue words/signals lose their power and effectiveness. It is better to not ask for anything, than to ask for a behavior and your dog is unable to respond the way you want.

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Palmer, AK
99645

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Monday 9am - 2pm
4pm - 7pm
Tuesday 9am - 12pm
4pm - 7pm
Wednesday 9am - 2pm
4pm - 7pm
Thursday 9am - 2pm
4pm - 7pm
Friday 9am - 2pm
4pm - 7pm
Saturday 8am - 7pm
Sunday 9am - 5pm

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