K9s Talking Scents

Cameron Ford

This podcast is all about Detection Dogs we talking training, working the dog in the real world, starting a new dog or have an experienced dog, this show is for you.  Calling all Detection dogs, Sniffer Dogs, those who compete in Nosework / Scentwork sports.  If you work a detection dog that sniffs out bombs, drugs, guns, cell phones, electronic devices or anything else this podcast is for you 

  1. 20 uur geleden

    #142 Narcotics Interdiction with Jeremy Bedingfield

    Jeremy Bedingfield (Southern California narcotics interdiction officer, Cartel Traps founder) shares the real methods for identifying and stopping drug loads on highways. Managing a GSP's competing instincts, reading suspects through interviews, finding hidden compartments, and the legal future of K9 detection. What We Cover: Why GSPs are harder to work in narcotics (genetically wired for bushes, not drugs) Building reasonable suspicion: the interview technique that reveals lies Vehicle targeting: what smugglers' cars have in common The two-direction search pattern (why it matters) Systematic vehicle search: start underneath, work inward void by void Real training vs. parking lot training: why they're different Dealing with 20+ kilo loads (changes dog expectations) Fentanyl reality: mixed loads, quick imprinting, prevalence on highways Body cam footage: what handlers miss in real time The future: AI harness technology (5-10 years away) Jeremy breaks down tradecraft that's rarely discussed publicly—from target selection to compartment location to creative training solutions. He also discusses why the legal system is moving toward objective K9 data (harness technology with biological algorithms) rather than handler interpretation. For: Drug dog handlers, narcotics officers, interdiction teams, law enforcement exploring K9 evidence in court. ________________________________________ 🧠 TRAIN WITH FORD K9 — ONLINE & IN PERSON Level up your detection dog training with Ford K9’s full education ecosystem: 🔥 ONLINE COURSES & LECTURES Odor Pays System, Air Movement, Cognition, Problem Solving & more 👉 https://FordK9.com 🔥 FORD K9 MEMBERSHIP (BEST VALUE) Members-only seminars, monthly lessons, exclusive Q&As, full video library 👉 https://FordK9.com/memberships 🔥 IN-PERSON CLASSES — SANTA ROSA, CA Detection Handler School Detection Dog Training Class Odor Pays Workshops 👉 Sign up at: https://FordK9.com 🛡️ STRATOS K9 — EVENT & VENUE DETECTION TEAMS Premier Explosive Detection & Firearm Detection Dog teams for: • Large-scale events • Conferences & expos • Concerts & festivals • Corporate security & dignitary operations Our dogs are specialists, not generalists — one mission, one discipline, no cross-training. 👉 Learn more: https://StratosK9.com 📩 For event inquiries: info@stratosk9.com 🐕 CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIALS Stratos K9 Instagram: https://instagram.com/stratosk9 LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/stratosk9 Ford K9 Instagram: https://instagram.com/fordk9detection Facebook: https://facebook.com/FordK9Detection

    1 u 26 m
  2. 22 mei

    #141 How To Reward On Blanks with Eric Stanbro

    Eric Stanbro (Working Dog Radio host, best-selling author, former Canton PD K9 handler) and Cameron Ford have the conversation detection dog handlers need to hear. This isn't polished—it's two veterans with decades of experience discussing the real problems, failures, and solutions in detection dog training. What We Cover: Why rewarding every find creates pattern dogs (and court problems)The "all done" command stolen from European trainers that changes blank search trainingCourt record analysis: why 100% training success rates destroy credibilityWhy dogs skip the first hide and go for their "favorite" odorThe magnet shell game for vehicle searches (stop starting from headlights)Edmonton PD airflow study: where vehicle odor ACTUALLY escapes (not door handles)Cameron's admission: 90% false alert rate at blank traffic stops—even for handlers who know betterThe vehicle door handle myth vs. touch transfer realityWhy detection training needs more "monkey wrenches" like NSW doesBalancing training records: 50% blanks, 50% finds for court credibilityEric walks through his evolution from "four hot, one blank" to incorporating proper blank searches, distractors, and variable rewards. Cameron breaks down the science, legal implications, and practical solutions. Both emphasize: we've made every mistake so you don't have to. Critical for: Law enforcement K9 handlers, private security detection teams, trainers building programs from scratch.

    1 u 38 m
  3. 15 mei

    #140.5 Are Kong's Really Addictive? | Dr. Paola Tiedemann Explains

    Dr. Paola Tiedemann and Cameron Ford dive into the controversial Kong toy research that detection dog handlers have been asking about for years. This episode exclusively covers the chemical analysis of Kong rubber toys and what it means for teams using toys as training aids or rewards. What We Cover: The chemical signature found inside Kong rubber toys Why this research was conducted and what question it answers U.S. vs. Europe: different legal frameworks for Kong training The Fourth Amendment problem: probable cause and court challenges How defense attorneys could use Kong training against handlers Risk assessment: "My client is a dog lover, there was a Kong in the car" Making informed decisions about toy-based training methods Dr. Tiedemann breaks down the science behind what dogs actually smell when detecting Kong toys, while Cameron addresses the operational and legal implications for law enforcement handlers. The conversation emphasizes informed decision-making rather than blanket recommendations—understanding both the benefits (used successfully in Europe) and risks (U.S. legal system challenges) of toy-based training. This isn't saying "don't do it"—this is saying "know what you're doing and the potential consequences." Upcoming Training Opportunities: 🔗 Colorado K9 Conference - Join Cameron and top trainers: https://coloradok9conference.com/ 🔗 Ford K9 Detection Dog Trainer Course - Comprehensive handler education: https://www.fordk9.com/detection-dog-trainer-course/ ________________________________________ 🧠 TRAIN WITH FORD K9 — ONLINE & IN PERSON Level up your detection dog training with Ford K9’s full education ecosystem: 🔥 ONLINE COURSES & LECTURES Odor Pays System, Air Movement, Cognition, Problem Solving & more 👉 https://FordK9.com 🔥 FORD K9 MEMBERSHIP (BEST VALUE) Members-only seminars, monthly lessons, exclusive Q&As, full video library 👉 https://FordK9.com/memberships 🔥 IN-PERSON CLASSES — SANTA ROSA, CA Detection Handler School Detection Dog Training Class Odor Pays Workshops 👉 Sign up at: https://FordK9.com 🛡️ STRATOS K9 — EVENT & VENUE DETECTION TEAMS Premier Explosive Detection & Firearm Detection Dog teams for: • Large-scale events • Conferences & expos • Concerts & festivals • Corporate security & dignitary operations Our dogs are specialists, not generalists — one mission, one discipline, no cross-training. 👉 Learn more: https://StratosK9.com 📩 For event inquiries: info@stratosk9.com 🐕 CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIALS Stratos K9 Instagram: https://instagram.com/stratosk9 LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/stratosk9 Ford K9 Instagram: https://instagram.com/fordk9detection Facebook: https://facebook.com/FordK9Detection

    14 min.
  4. 7 mei

    #140 Firearms Detection Data and KONGs with Dr. Paola Tiedemann (Part 1)

    Dr. Paola Tiedemann returns to break down the groundbreaking firearm detection research she conducted with Cameron over the past four years. As the newly promoted Director of the Institute for Forensic Sciences at Texas Tech University, Dr. Tiedemann reveals why training on gun oils, solvents, and bulk smokeless powder creates operational blind spots. What We Cover: Why training on diphenylamine (the "gun chemical") causes false negatives The magazine problem: loaded vs. unloaded smell completely different Old firearms in storage (5+ years unfired): can your dog find them? Why teaspoons of powder don't represent real ammunition odor amounts The untargeted approach: what dogs actually detect vs. what we think they detect Training variety is key: mixing full weapons, magazines, ammunition types This research challenges the widespread practice of training solely on firing residue, propellants, or cleaning solvents. Dr. Tiedemann explains why firearms that haven't been recently fired present a completely different odor picture—and why most firearm dogs aren't trained to find them. PART 2 drops next Friday covering the controversial Kong training study and what it means for detection dog handlers. Upcoming Training Opportunities: 🔗 Colorado K9 Conference - Join Cameron and top trainers: https://coloradok9conference.com/ 🔗 Ford K9 Detection Dog Trainer Course - Comprehensive handler education: https://www.fordk9.com/detection-dog-trainer-course/ ________________________________________ 🧠 TRAIN WITH FORD K9 — ONLINE & IN PERSON Level up your detection dog training with Ford K9’s full education ecosystem: 🔥 ONLINE COURSES & LECTURES Odor Pays System, Air Movement, Cognition, Problem Solving & more 👉 https://FordK9.com 🔥 FORD K9 MEMBERSHIP (BEST VALUE) Members-only seminars, monthly lessons, exclusive Q&As, full video library 👉 https://FordK9.com/memberships 🔥 IN-PERSON CLASSES — SANTA ROSA, CA Detection Handler School Detection Dog Training Class Odor Pays Workshops 👉 Sign up at: https://FordK9.com 🛡️ STRATOS K9 — EVENT & VENUE DETECTION TEAMS Premier Explosive Detection & Firearm Detection Dog teams for: • Large-scale events • Conferences & expos • Concerts & festivals • Corporate security & dignitary operations Our dogs are specialists, not generalists — one mission, one discipline, no cross-training. 👉 Learn more: https://StratosK9.com 📩 For event inquiries: info@stratosk9.com 🐕 CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIALS Stratos K9 Instagram: https://instagram.com/stratosk9 LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/stratosk9 Ford K9 Instagram: https://instagram.com/fordk9detection Facebook: https://facebook.com/FordK9Detection

    45 min.
  5. 23 apr

    #139 Firearm Detection LAPD Metro K9 Tom Onyshko

    Tom Onyshko is a 20-year LAPD veteran and handler in Metropolitan Division's elite K9 Platoon, where he runs both a patrol apprehension dog and a firearm detection dog. With only 5 firearm detection spots serving all of Los Angeles, Tom shares real-world insights from one of the busiest K9 programs in the country. What We Cover: Why LAPD runs single-purpose dogs (patrol, narcotics, explosives, firearms - all separate) Getting into Metro Division: the physical tests, firearm quals, and multi-year tryout process Operating in South Central LA: 30 search warrants in one month, 6 warrants in one day Firearm detection deployment: area searches, vehicle searches, evidence recovery Training philosophy: why LAPD doesn't track, e-collar use, and area search methodology Working with LAPD's SIS (Special Investigation Section) - confirmed real and elite Real callout stories: multi-story building searches, murder suspect apprehensions Tom's background includes 5 years in LAPD's South Bureau gang unit serving high-risk warrants with homicide detectives and FBI before joining Metro Division. He discusses the differences between law enforcement and military K9 work, handler selection criteria, and what makes Metropolitan Division's training standards unique. Essential listening for law enforcement K9 handlers, firearm detection teams, and anyone interested in how elite metro agencies deploy detection dogs operationally. ________________________________________ 🧠 TRAIN WITH FORD K9 — ONLINE & IN PERSON Level up your detection dog training with Ford K9’s full education ecosystem: 🔥 ONLINE COURSES & LECTURES Odor Pays System, Air Movement, Cognition, Problem Solving & more 👉 https://FordK9.com 🔥 FORD K9 MEMBERSHIP (BEST VALUE) Members-only seminars, monthly lessons, exclusive Q&As, full video library 👉 https://FordK9.com/memberships 🔥 IN-PERSON CLASSES — SANTA ROSA, CA Detection Handler School Detection Dog Training Class Odor Pays Workshops 👉 Sign up at: https://FordK9.com 🛡️ STRATOS K9 — EVENT & VENUE DETECTION TEAMS Premier Explosive Detection & Firearm Detection Dog teams for: • Large-scale events • Conferences & expos • Concerts & festivals • Corporate security & dignitary operations Our dogs are specialists, not generalists — one mission, one discipline, no cross-training. 👉 Learn more: https://StratosK9.com 📩 For event inquiries: info@stratosk9.com 🐕 CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIALS Stratos K9 Instagram: https://instagram.com/stratosk9 LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/stratosk9 Ford K9 Instagram: https://instagram.com/fordk9detection Facebook: https://facebook.com/FordK9Detection

    1 u 30 m
  6. 26 mrt

    #137 From Puppy to MWD with Jason Dill

    In this episode of K9’s Talking Scents, Cameron Ford and Jason Dill discuss the intricacies of breeding and training military working dogs, focusing on the DOD Military Working Dog breeding program at Lackland Air Force Base. They explore Jason's military background, the challenges of breeding dual-purpose dogs, and the importance of genetics in producing effective working dogs. The conversation also touches on the evolution of the military working dog program and the training methodologies used to prepare young dogs for detection work. In this conversation, Jason and Cameron delve into the intricacies of dog training, particularly focusing on detection dogs. They discuss the importance of odor recognition over object reliance, the challenges of managing puppy training and breeding, and the transition from box training to real-world applications. The dialogue emphasizes the significance of introducing multiple odors early in training, innovative training methods, and the balance between independence and guidance in training. They also touch on the evolving standards in detection dog training and the future implications of technology in enhancing handler expertise.________________________________________🧠 TRAIN WITH FORD K9 — ONLINE & IN PERSONLevel up your detection dog training with Ford K9’s full education ecosystem:🔥 ONLINE COURSES & LECTURESOdor Pays System, Air Movement, Cognition, Problem Solving & more👉 https://FordK9.com🔥 FORD K9 MEMBERSHIP (BEST VALUE)Members-only seminars, monthly lessons, exclusive Q&As, full video library👉 https://FordK9.com/memberships🔥 IN-PERSON CLASSES — SANTA ROSA, CADetection Handler SchoolDetection Dog Training ClassOdor Pays Workshops👉 Sign up at: https://FordK9.com🛡️ STRATOS K9 — EVENT & VENUE DETECTION TEAMSPremier Explosive Detection & Firearm Detection Dog teams for:• Large-scale events• Conferences & expos• Concerts & festivals• Corporate security & dignitary operationsOur dogs are specialists, not generalists — one mission, one discipline, no cross-training.👉 Learn more: https://StratosK9.com📩 For event inquiries: info@stratosk9.com🐕 CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIALSStratos K9Instagram: https://instagram.com/stratosk9LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/stratosk9Ford K9Instagram: https://instagram.com/fordk9detectionFacebook: https://facebook.com/FordK9Detection

    1 u 22 m
  7. 14 mrt

    From Army Rangers to Navy SEALs: Lessons from a Combat K9 Handler | Brent Verner

    Brent Verner shares his journey from being one of the first eight Army Ranger Combat Assault Dog handlers to working with Naval Special Warfare, bringing decades of operational experience from Iraq and Afghanistan. Brent discusses his first dog Rudy—a "landshark" who licked trees in training but became a combat-proven asset—and the evolution from contract handlers to Ranger-qualified K9 operators. The conversation explores critical lessons learned in combat: why early training didn't translate to operational success, how dogs perform differently under real-world pressure, and the importance of calculated training with specific benchmarks versus "checkbox" mentality. Brent emphasizes that special operations training is deliberately structured with measurable tasks, while many law enforcement programs settle for general training that doesn't build fluency. Key Topics: Combat Assault Dog program origins and selectionReal combat deployments: what worked, what didn'tDogs getting injured and handler decision-makingTransitioning from military to law enforcement mindsetWhy "busy" agencies (like LAPD) create better handlers fasterThe danger of checkbox training vs. calculated objectivesFirst aid and tactical care for working dogsFinding credible mentors who've "no-shit done it"Essential for law enforcement K9 handlers, security operators, and military working dog communities looking to elevate training standards beyond basic competency. Brent Verner Background: Former U.S. Army Ranger, one of first eight Combat Assault Dog handlers, transitioned to Naval Special Warfare, multiple combat deployments (Iraq/Afghanistan), now trains law enforcement and security K9 teams in Pennsylvania.

    1 u 28 m

Info

This podcast is all about Detection Dogs we talking training, working the dog in the real world, starting a new dog or have an experienced dog, this show is for you.  Calling all Detection dogs, Sniffer Dogs, those who compete in Nosework / Scentwork sports.  If you work a detection dog that sniffs out bombs, drugs, guns, cell phones, electronic devices or anything else this podcast is for you 

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