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Our hosts, Robin Greubel and Stacy Barnett, chat about a peculiar kind of self-deception. The kind that costs years of training, thousands of dollars, and sometimes the well-being of both dog and handler. They call it beer goggles: the tendency to see the dog we want rather than the dog standing in front of us.
Robin talks about Flash, her Lab who simply doesn't bark. Selectively bred for quiet patience in a hunting blind, Flash is temperamentally ill-suited for the alert-dependent demands of FEMA disaster work.
It's a genetic reality rather than a training gap, and knowing the difference is the whole game.
Beer goggles run in every direction. A handler can overestimate a dog's capacity, grinding for years toward a certification the animal was never built to earn. But the distortion runs the other way too. It’s easy to mistake a sensitive dog who has gained real confidence for one who still needs to be handled with kid gloves, and failing to update that mental image.
Robin's young Raven is a sharp example. written off as food-averse and agility-reluctant, she turned explosive once Robin stopped pushing food and started throwing toys for her to hunt.
Stacy’s current dog was acquired in 2020 as a sport prospect, redirected to wilderness search and rescue, and is now being painstakingly rebuilt for urban USAR work. The genetics were always there, but the USAR-specific foundations needed filling in.
As a trainer, you need to be asking, honestly, whether you're doing this for the dog or for yourself, and whether the gap you're looking at is closeable. A starter dog, like a starter home, is nothing to be ashamed of!
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By Stacy Barnett, Robin Greubel4.8
4545 ratings
What to listen for:
Our hosts, Robin Greubel and Stacy Barnett, chat about a peculiar kind of self-deception. The kind that costs years of training, thousands of dollars, and sometimes the well-being of both dog and handler. They call it beer goggles: the tendency to see the dog we want rather than the dog standing in front of us.
Robin talks about Flash, her Lab who simply doesn't bark. Selectively bred for quiet patience in a hunting blind, Flash is temperamentally ill-suited for the alert-dependent demands of FEMA disaster work.
It's a genetic reality rather than a training gap, and knowing the difference is the whole game.
Beer goggles run in every direction. A handler can overestimate a dog's capacity, grinding for years toward a certification the animal was never built to earn. But the distortion runs the other way too. It’s easy to mistake a sensitive dog who has gained real confidence for one who still needs to be handled with kid gloves, and failing to update that mental image.
Robin's young Raven is a sharp example. written off as food-averse and agility-reluctant, she turned explosive once Robin stopped pushing food and started throwing toys for her to hunt.
Stacy’s current dog was acquired in 2020 as a sport prospect, redirected to wilderness search and rescue, and is now being painstakingly rebuilt for urban USAR work. The genetics were always there, but the USAR-specific foundations needed filling in.
As a trainer, you need to be asking, honestly, whether you're doing this for the dog or for yourself, and whether the gap you're looking at is closeable. A starter dog, like a starter home, is nothing to be ashamed of!
Key Topics:
Resources:
We want to hear from you:

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