Balanced Dog Training With Suburban K9

Suburban K9

We have an expert team of dog trainers located around the country that bring their wealth of knowledge to this podcast. Matt Covey, our company founder and podcast host has been training dogs for over 18 years and has huge amounts of experience helping people raise their dogs properly and solving complex aggression and fear issues. Nelson Medrano is a Senior Trainer with SK9 and has experience with all types of dogs including countless aggression cases. Learn, laugh and get info that only an experienced dog trainer can bring you.

  1. JAN 12

    Muzzle Training---How, Why and When

    Muzzle training and conditioning doesn’t have to be scary or stressful. Here is a link to the video we discussed today: https://youtu.be/FSnpjh2k7O4Why Proper Muzzle Acclimation Is So Important: When muzzle training is done poorly, dogs often learn to fear the muzzle. That fear doesn’t come from the muzzle itself, it comes from how it’s introduced.Common problems happen when:The muzzle is forced on the dog, the dog is restrained or cornered, the muzzle only appears before scary events, stress signals are ignored, or the process moves too fast. That’s how dogs learn that the muzzle predicts bad things.In contrast, proper muzzle acclimation teaches the dog that the muzzle predicts food and calm interactions, they have choice and control, nothing bad happens when the muzzle appears and staying relaxed pays off. That’s exactly what you’ll see in this video.The goal is not to rush to get the muzzle buckled. The real goal is to get a dog who understands what’s happening, who isn’t stressed or shut down, and who willingly participates. If a dog can calmly put their nose into a muzzle on their own, everything else becomes easier.Treats are a huge part of successful muzzle acclimation — and no, they’re not “bribes.” Food helps change emotional responses, build positive associations, lower anxiety, reinforce calm behavior and create clarity.Muzzle appears → food appearsThis simple step is where most of the groundwork happens.Voluntary Nose-In Muzzle Training is something you should be thinking about. Eventually, the dog begins placing their nose inside the muzzle — on their own. This is a critical moment in muzzle training.Build Duration Slowly Duration is where a lot of people mess up muzzle training. They get one success and immediately jump ahead. Instead, we build duration gradually while watching the dog’s body language closely.If stress shows up, we slow down or take a step back. There’s no deadline or rush.Choosing the Right Muzzle for TrainingNot all muzzles are created equal. For proper muzzle acclimation, the muzzle should allow full panting, allow drinking water, allow taking treats, fit securely without rubbing and not restrict breathingBasket muzzles are typically the best option for training because they allow normal mouth movement and airflow.Muzzles are one of the most misunderstood tools in dog training. A lot of people assume that if a dog wears a muzzle it means the dog is bad or incredibly aggressive. In reality, a muzzle is simply a safety tool, and when it’s introduced correctly, all dogs can learn to wear one comfortably and calmly.Thanks for listening and feel free to reach out with questions!

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About

We have an expert team of dog trainers located around the country that bring their wealth of knowledge to this podcast. Matt Covey, our company founder and podcast host has been training dogs for over 18 years and has huge amounts of experience helping people raise their dogs properly and solving complex aggression and fear issues. Nelson Medrano is a Senior Trainer with SK9 and has experience with all types of dogs including countless aggression cases. Learn, laugh and get info that only an experienced dog trainer can bring you.

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