
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Your dog is calm one minute, then loses their mind at the window the next and you’re left wondering if you’re helping or making it worse. We pull back the curtain on one of our weekly group coaching calls inside my online dog training community and get very real about the mechanics that actually change behavior: how you use marker words, how you proof obedience around distractions, and how to stop reactivity without living in constant conflict.
First, we tackle a sneaky problem that shows up in classes and multi-dog homes: your dog hears you say “yes” to another dog and breaks position like they just got called to a party. We talk through how to proof that picture using place training, clear boundaries, and consistent follow-through so your dog learns context instead of guessing. If you’ve ever felt like your markers “don’t work,” this will sharpen your timing fast.
Then we dig into reactive barking at windows and doors after a move, including how to think about e-collar corrections as information versus noise. I explain the difference between an interrupter that stops the moment and a true punishment that changes the next choice, plus what consistency should look like day to day. We also cover when it makes sense to skip e-collar conditioning for a dangerous backyard habit versus when you should slow down and condition properly for broader off-leash reliability.
Finally, you’ll hear live training: cleaner position changes with open-hand versus closed-fist lures, why short sessions protect motivation, and early e-collar conditioning through place sends with a young Lab learning how to turn pressure off. If you want practical dog training advice you can apply immediately, hit play, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more dog owners can find the show.
Visit us on the website here to see what we've got going on and how you can join our pack of good dogs and owners.
By Meghan Dougherty4.6
141141 ratings
Your dog is calm one minute, then loses their mind at the window the next and you’re left wondering if you’re helping or making it worse. We pull back the curtain on one of our weekly group coaching calls inside my online dog training community and get very real about the mechanics that actually change behavior: how you use marker words, how you proof obedience around distractions, and how to stop reactivity without living in constant conflict.
First, we tackle a sneaky problem that shows up in classes and multi-dog homes: your dog hears you say “yes” to another dog and breaks position like they just got called to a party. We talk through how to proof that picture using place training, clear boundaries, and consistent follow-through so your dog learns context instead of guessing. If you’ve ever felt like your markers “don’t work,” this will sharpen your timing fast.
Then we dig into reactive barking at windows and doors after a move, including how to think about e-collar corrections as information versus noise. I explain the difference between an interrupter that stops the moment and a true punishment that changes the next choice, plus what consistency should look like day to day. We also cover when it makes sense to skip e-collar conditioning for a dangerous backyard habit versus when you should slow down and condition properly for broader off-leash reliability.
Finally, you’ll hear live training: cleaner position changes with open-hand versus closed-fist lures, why short sessions protect motivation, and early e-collar conditioning through place sends with a young Lab learning how to turn pressure off. If you want practical dog training advice you can apply immediately, hit play, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more dog owners can find the show.
Visit us on the website here to see what we've got going on and how you can join our pack of good dogs and owners.

370,467 Listeners

1,200 Listeners

99,775 Listeners

41 Listeners

8,031 Listeners

165,059 Listeners

927 Listeners

47,898 Listeners

18,109 Listeners

15,461 Listeners

8,027 Listeners

5,608 Listeners

11,709 Listeners

62 Listeners

12,430 Listeners