Pawprint Academy: Your Blueprint to Raising Better Dogs

TOP Dog Training LLC

At Pawprint Academy, we believe great dogs start with great leadership. Hosted by the trainers behind TOP Dog Training, this podcast gives you the proven blueprint to build Trust, Obedience, and Performance in your pack. From tackling everyday struggles like leash pulling and recall, to creating structure and harmony at home, we share real-world strategies, client stories, and expert insights to help you raise a better dog AND become the leader your pack needs.

  1. Crate Anxiety: Fixing Whining and Panic in the Kennel

    4D AGO

    Crate Anxiety: Fixing Whining and Panic in the Kennel

    Crate anxiety is one of the most misunderstood dog behavior problems, and most owners are accidentally making it worse. Whining, barking, and panic in the crate are not random; they are learned behaviors that have been reinforced over time. When a dog cries and gets attention or is released, they learn that emotional behavior works. This episode breaks down why crate training fails when there is no structure, no clear communication, and no follow-through. If your dog struggles in the kennel, the issue is not the crate, it is the lack of clarity around what behavior actually leads to freedom. Most common advice focuses on comfort, adding blankets, toys, or sitting next to the crate to reassure the dog. That approach sounds good but it does not fix the root problem. Dogs do not need more comfort, they need clear expectations and consistent outcomes. This episode explains why releasing a dog during whining builds stronger anxiety, why ignoring the problem without a plan leads to frustration, and how poor timing from the handler creates confusion. You will learn how crate anxiety develops, how to stop reinforcing it, and how to start building calm behavior the right way. We walk through a step-by-step approach to crate training that builds confidence, independence, and emotional control. You will learn how to reward calm behavior with proper marker timing, how to structure short successful sessions, and how to progress without overwhelming your dog. We also cover how crate training connects directly to overall obedience, leadership, and household structure. If you want a dog that can settle quietly and confidently in the crate, this episode gives you a clear, practical system to make that happen.

    47 min
  2. Pulling Toward Dogs or People: The Gateway to Reactivity

    MAR 30

    Pulling Toward Dogs or People: The Gateway to Reactivity

    This episode breaks down one of the most misunderstood behaviors in dog training, pulling toward people and other dogs. Most owners label it as friendliness, but that is incorrect. What you are seeing is arousal, fixation, and a lack of impulse control. When a dog is allowed to pull and reach what it wants, that behavior becomes self-reinforcing. Over time, excitement turns into frustration, and frustration is what fuels leash reactivity, barking, and lunging. If you do not address this early, you are not dealing with a social dog, you are building a reactive one. We explain why the walk is not just exercise, it is a daily leadership test. If your dog is deciding where to go, how fast to move, and when to engage with distractions, you are losing influence in the exact moments that matter most. This episode teaches you how to shift that dynamic. You will learn how to build a neutral dog that can exist around people and other dogs without needing to engage them. That neutrality is what creates reliability, better obedience, and real-world control, not forced socialization or constant interaction. We also give you a clear, practical framework to fix the problem. You will learn how to read early body language, interrupt fixation before it escalates, and reinforce disengagement the right way. Timing, consistency, and clear communication are the difference between progress and frustration. This episode gives you a step-by-step path to stop pulling before it becomes reactivity, and build a dog that walks with you, not toward everything else.

    51 min
  3. Overexcitement at the Door: Chaos, Jumping, and Loss of Control

    MAR 23

    Overexcitement at the Door: Chaos, Jumping, and Loss of Control

    Overexcitement at the door is one of the most common breakdowns in household structure, and one of the clearest indicators of weak leadership in the home. In this episode, we break down exactly why door chaos happens, starting with how anticipation, lack of boundaries, and inconsistent patterns create a rehearsed state of arousal every time the doorbell rings or a handle moves. What looks like excitement is actually a conditioned behavior that has been repeated and reinforced over time. We explain why most common fixes fail, including yelling commands, repeating “sit,” or physically restraining the dog without teaching a clear alternative behavior. These approaches suppress the moment but do not change the pattern. We walk through how to replace chaos with clarity by installing structure around thresholds, controlling access to the door, and teaching the dog what calm behavior actually looks like in that context. This includes the use of place work, leash guidance, and clear marker timing to interrupt escalation early and reinforce stability. We also cover how handler emotion, timing, and inconsistency directly fuel the problem, and how small mistakes at the door compound into long-term behavioral issues. This is not just about manners, it is about safety, control, and accountability. If your dog loses control when guests arrive, this episode gives you a clear framework to fix it through leadership, repetition, and structure.

    46 min
  4. Chewing and Destructive Behavior: Why Dogs Destroy Things and How to Stop It

    FEB 23

    Chewing and Destructive Behavior: Why Dogs Destroy Things and How to Stop It

    Destructive chewing is not random, and it is not your dog being spiteful. Dogs chew because of biology, stress, boredom, teething, lack of structure, or because they have learned that chewing furniture works. In this episode of Paw Print Academy, we break down the real reasons behind destructive chewing and counter surfing, and why punishment after the fact fails every time. If you are searching for answers about dog behavior problems, obedience training, or how to stop your dog from destroying the house, this episode gives you a practical, science-based path forward. We explain why yelling, rubbing a dog’s nose in damage, or correcting minutes later does nothing to change behavior. Dogs learn through timing, clarity, and consequence, not emotion. The real solution is leadership, management, and structured training. That means crate training done correctly, structured exercise, clear boundaries around food and furniture, and proactive obedience training that teaches impulse control before temptation shows up. Prevention is not weakness; it is smart dog training. If you want to stop destructive chewing, you need to meet your dog’s physical and mental needs while tightening up your household rules. We walk through how to create daily structure, how to use place and crate commands to prevent chaos, and how to build reliability so your dog can be trusted unsupervised. This is about becoming a calm, consistent pack leader who sets standards and follows through. When you combine structure, accountability, and clear communication, destructive behavior fades and a stable, obedient dog takes its place.

    55 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.8
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

At Pawprint Academy, we believe great dogs start with great leadership. Hosted by the trainers behind TOP Dog Training, this podcast gives you the proven blueprint to build Trust, Obedience, and Performance in your pack. From tackling everyday struggles like leash pulling and recall, to creating structure and harmony at home, we share real-world strategies, client stories, and expert insights to help you raise a better dog AND become the leader your pack needs.