Hope2K9 Foundation - Dog Training and Rescue - San Diego, California

Hope2K9 Foundation - Dog Training and Rescue - San Diego, California Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Hope2K9 Foundation - Dog Training and Rescue - San Diego, California, San Diego, CA &, San Diego, CA.

Hope2K9 is a training-centered non profit organization, offering dog training services for all ages and breeds, as well as fully trained adoptable dogs in Washington and Southern California.

05/27/2026

I’ve tried to post this half a dozen times… it just sucks. We lost Oakley yesterday to a very sudden, and certainly VERY unexpected, medical crisis. Having to see another dog over the 🌈 so soon really wouldn’t have been my choice, but it sure does come with the territory of serving so many dogs.

05/19/2026

The absolute of this girl. 🤣

05/13/2026

What is ? Check it out this Sunday at 11am PST!

05/06/2026

I was recording to show you her tripod gate 🐾, but I ended up catching how badly she just wants to crawl into my skin every time I take her out of the kennel. She’s beyond precious.

Laz sent her to give me hugs… I’m sure of it. 🥹

**Edited to add for the folks without common sense… this girl is OBVIOUSLY going to a vet about her leg, and every other assessment she needs. Come on now… this is a rescue effort! 🤦‍♀️

04/26/2026

A new peer reviewed study published in the journal Environmental Research found that commercial dry dog and cat foods contain tiny pieces of plastic (microplastics), and they were detected in every brand tested. Dog food had more than double the levels found in cat food, with dogs exposed to about 9 particles per 5 grams, compared to about 4 per 5 grams in cat food. The plastics included common materials such as PET, polyethylene, and polypropylene, likely originating from raw ingredients, processing equipment, and packaging. Researchers suggest dogs may face greater whole body exposure due to higher intake, while cats may be more prone to chronic gut irritation.

If you are looking to support gut health, certain probiotic strains like Saccharomyces boulardii and Lactobacillus rhamnosus are among the most studied. They have been shown to support the gut barrier, help balance the microbiome, and reduce inflammation, especially in cases like acute diarrhea. For more information on how to help limit your pet’s microplastic exposure, visit www.ProactivePaws.com

04/22/2026

Adoptable goofballs… size small and large! ☺️ More details on Oakley or Gordo can be found at hope2k9.com (linked in bio).

We fully train and vet all of our adoptable dogs before placement, and we train YOU how to follow through on that training so you can enjoy a well behaved dog for life.

Oakley and Gordo are currently located in Eastern Washington, but we do adopt out of state as well.

🐶 🐶

“So no—I don’t recommend playing ball every day.Because every throw is a reinforcement of the primal mind.And the primal...
03/30/2025

“So no—I don’t recommend playing ball every day.
Because every throw is a reinforcement of the primal mind.

And the primal mind, unchecked, cannot be reasoned with. It cannot self-regulate. It becomes a slave to its own instincts.

Train your dog to engage with you, not just the object. Teach arousal with control, play with purpose, and rest with confidence.

Your dog deserves better than obsession.He deserves balance. He deserves you—not just the ball.”

There is a question I get asked constantly:

“Bart, should I play fetch with my dog every day? He LOVES it!”

And my answer is always the same:
No. Especially not with working breeds like the Malinois, German Shepherd, Dutch Shepherd, or any other high-prey-drive dog, like hunting dogs, Agility dogs, etc.

This answer is often met with surprise, sometimes with resistance. I get it—your dog brings you the ball, eyes bright, body full of energy, practically begging you to throw it. It feels like bonding. It feels like exercise. It feels like the right thing to do.

But from a scientific, behavioral, and neurobiological perspective—it’s not. In fact, it may be one of the most harmful daily habits for your dog’s mental health and nervous system regulation that no one is warning you about.

Let me break it down for you in detail. This will be long, but if you have a working dog, you need to understand this.

Working dogs like the Malinois and German Shepherd were selected over generations for their intensity, persistence, and drive to engage in behaviors tied to the prey sequence: orient, stalk, chase, grab, bite, kill. In their role as police, protection, herding, or military dogs, these genetically encoded motor patterns are partially utilized—but directed toward human-defined tasks.

Fetch is an artificial mimicry of this prey sequence.
• Ball = prey
• Throwing = movement stimulus
• Chase = reinforcement
• Grab and return = closure and Reward - Reinforecment again.

Every time you throw that ball, you’re not just giving your dog “exercise.” You are triggering an evolutionary motor pattern that was designed to result in the death of prey. But here’s the twist:

The "kill bite" never comes.
There’s no closure. No end. No satisfaction, Except when he start chewing on the ball by himself, which lead to even more problems. So the dog is neurologically left in a state of arousal.

When your dog sees that ball, his brain lights up with dopamine. Anticipation, motivation, drive. When you throw it, adrenaline kicks in. It becomes a cocktail of high arousal and primal intensity.

Dopamine is not the reward chemical—it’s the pursuit chemical. It creates the urge to chase, to repeat the behavior. Adrenaline and cortisol, stress hormones, spike during the chase. Even though the dog “gets the ball,” the biological closure never really happens—because the pattern is reset, again and again, with each throw.

Now imagine doing this every single day.
The dog’s brain begins to wire itself for a constant state of high alert, constantly expecting arousal, movement, and stimulation. This is how we create chronic stress.

The autonomic nervous system has two main branches:

• Sympathetic Nervous System – “Fight, flight, chase”

• Parasympathetic Nervous System – “Rest, digest, recover”

Fetch, as a prey-driven game, stimulates the sympathetic system. The problem? Most owners never help the dog come down from that state.
There’s no decompression, no parasympathetic activation, no transition into rest.

Chronic sympathetic dominance leads to:
• Panting, pacing, inability to settle
• Destructive behaviors
• Hypervigilance
• Reactivity to movement
• Obsession with balls, toys, other dogs
• Poor sleep cycles
• Digestive issues
• A weakened immune system over time
• Behavioral burnout

In essence, we’re creating a dog who is neurologically trapped in the primal mind—always hunting, never resting.

Expectation Is a Form of Pressure!!!!!!

When fetch becomes a daily ritual, your dog begins to expect it.This is no longer “fun.” It’s a conditioned need. And when that need is not met?

Stress. Frustration. Obsession.

A dog who expects to chase every day but doesn’t get it may begin redirecting that drive elsewhere—chasing shadows, lights, children, other dogs, cars.
This is how pathological behavior patterns form.

Many people use fetch as a shortcut for physical exercise.

But movement is not the same as regulation.
Throwing a ball 100 times does not tire out a working dog—it wires him tighter.

What these dogs need is:
• Cognitive engagement
• Problem solving
• Relationship-based training
• Impulse control and on/off switches
• Scentwork or tracking to satisfy the nose-brain connection
• Regulated physical outlets like structured walks, swimming, tug with rules, or balanced sport work
• Recovery time in a calm environment

But What About Drive Fulfillment? Don’t They Need an Outlet?

Yes, and here’s the nuance:

Drive should be fulfilled strategically, not passively or impulsively. This is where real training philosophy comes in.

Instead of free-for-all ball throwing, I recommend:
• Tug with rules of out, impulse control, and handler engagement

• Controlled prey play with a flirt pole, used sparingly

• Engagement-based drive work with clear start and stop signals

• Training sessions that integrate drive, control, and reward

• Activities like search games, mantrailing, or protection sport with balance

• Working on “down in drive” — the ability to switch from arousal to rest

This builds a thinking dog, not a reactive one. The Bottom Line: Just Because He Loves It Doesn’t Mean It’s Good for Him

Your Malinois, German Shepherd, Dutchie, or other working dog may love the ball. He may bring it to you with joy. But the question is not what he likes—it’s what he needs.

A child may love candy every day, but a good parent knows better. As a trainer, handler, and caretaker, it’s your responsibility to think long term.
You’re not raising a dog for this moment. You’re developing a life companion, a regulated athlete, a resilient thinker.

So no—I don’t recommend playing ball every day.
Because every throw is a reinforcement of the primal mind.

And the primal mind, unchecked, cannot be reasoned with. It cannot self-regulate. It becomes a slave to its own instincts.

Train your dog to engage with you, not just the object. Teach arousal with control, play with purpose, and rest with confidence.

Your dog deserves better than obsession.He deserves balance. He deserves you—not just the ball.


Bart De Gols

💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯We agree completely, and this is why we taper dogs off of drugs like Prozac prior to board and train. It is SO e...
02/16/2025

💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯
We agree completely, and this is why we taper dogs off of drugs like Prozac prior to board and train. It is SO exceedingly rare for the drug to demonstrate a benefit long term, and more often than not, there are actually negative side affects. Sedation impedes training/learning, dogs who don’t feel well will not learn well when a proper behavior modification program is implemented.

For years, fluoxetine (Prozac) has been pushed as the answer to behavioral problems in dogs. Veterinary behaviorists and force-free advocates love to cite “science-backed” studies to justify long-term medication use. But here’s a big problem, most of these studies are flawed, biased, and rely almost entirely on owner-reported data.
Take, for example, the 2009 study on fluoxetine for compulsive disorders in dogs (Irimajiri et al., J Am Vet Med Assoc). It claimed fluoxetine helped, yet the only improvement came from owners’ OPINIONS, not actual behavioral measurements. When researchers looked at objective data the dogs’ actual behavior logs they found NO SIGNIFICANT difference between the medicated and placebo groups. But guess which result gets cited?🤫
How about the 2007 study on fluoxetine for separation anxiety (Simpson et al., Veterinary Therapeutics). The conclusion? Fluoxetine was effective … but only when paired with a structured behavior modification plan. And yet, thousands of dogs are medicated without any meaningful training, as if a pill can replace actual learning.
Sad reality is that Dogs are being drugged, not rehabilitated.
Ask any serious trainer what happens when they get a dog that’s been on fluoxetine for years. They take the dog off the meds, implement a sound training plan, and SHOCKINGLY the dog improves.
Not because fluoxetine “worked,” but because the dog finally got what it needed: clarity and proper training.
Yet, the AVSAB keeps pushing these medications while dismissing legitimate training as “aversive” or “outdated.” They’d rather chemically suppress behavior than actually address it.
The real question isn’t whether fluoxetine has some effect but why so many dogs improve when you REMOVE the drug and train them properly?!!!
Behavioral change comes from learning, not sedation. It’s time to stop pretending otherwise.
I know I am not the only one noticing that dogs on fluoxetine don’t get better - they just get dull.
The dog isn’t learning or adapting, just becoming more passive.
This can actuallY DELAY proper rehabilitation, because the dog’s emotions and responses are chemically suppressed rather than modified through learning.
Thinking about making a solo podcast to talk about the dog I have in training right now, one of the many that end up euthanized after YEARS of being on SSRI’s and the pandemic of prescribing psychotropics like flea medication

01/01/2025
Update: Foster secured. 🆘 Foster needed! This is Canela, a mixed breed adolescent (8 months), friendly/submissive with e...
12/30/2024

Update: Foster secured.

🆘 Foster needed!

This is Canela, a mixed breed adolescent (8 months), friendly/submissive with everything (people, dogs, cats), and in need of intake to our program.

We need a foster ASAP until 1/12 or 1/13, if anyone can step up - please message me! Currently located in Escondido/Daley Ranch with temp foster/good Samaritan who didn’t want to see a great dog end up on the streets or in a shelter.

You can also text the business line if convenient, for more info or to offer foster space. 760-224-6556

-Cam

Address

San Diego, CA &
San Diego, CA
99204

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 6pm
Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday 10am - 6pm

Telephone

+17602246556

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