suddeth08

Back to the Laboratory in Bite Work

If your dog won’t counter full, won’t push into the fight, or spins away when you approach, this episode is for you. Jerry breaks down exactly why these bite work issues happen and how to rebuild the foundation so your dog bites harder, fuller, and with real confidence.

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw discusses:

  • Drive channelling as a confidence builder for your dog. 
  • Bite work problems and their solution strategies.
  • Inducing counter bites, getting appropriate pressure when biting, and encouraging pushing into the bite. 
  • Reasons to train your out before your bite work and not create an association that may create an out you don’t want.
  • The three types of pressure you need to account for are creating desensitization to distraction objects.

Key Takeaways:

  • If a dog doesn’t know how to fight out of its problems, you may get displacement and avoidance creeping in. 
  • Training bite work in young dogs may require different techniques than those used for training with older dogs. 
  • When you train with a crutch, you will, eventually, need to wean yourself off the crutch. 
  • Make sure your decoys aren’t bailing. Make sure they aren’t sidestepping, dropping their arms, or pulling the dogs into their chest. That is only going to make it worse. 
  • It is very important to be able to get your dog out in many different ways. That is going to require desensitization to anything you’re going to bring near the dog’s head. 
  • We have to work on type, intensity, and duration of pressure, and our goal is to desensitize objects early in training. The more the dog can see those things, the more he can negotiate through weird stuff that he hasn’t seen before; the more the dog will understand what he’s supposed to do and how he’s supposed to do it. 

“One of the things that we know is that the grip itself is the barometer of how the dog feels when he’s biting. So if the dog doesn’t feel super confident about biting, he’s going to create a little bit of distance between himself and the perceived conflict, which could be the helper itself.” —  Jerry Bradshaw

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: thedriveco.com 

The Drive Company Instagram: instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Dog Armour: dogarmour.com 

Dog Armour Instagram: instagram.com/dogarmourpro 

Rogue Arsenal: roguearsenal.com 

Rogue Arsenal Instagram: instagram.com/rogue_arsenal_official 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it.

Attention, Direction & Draw

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw discusses:

  • Thinking about the end game from the beginning of your training. 
  • Creating neutrality through all kinds of distractions. 
  • Look at me, look at me, look at that, and look at that while giving commands for your dog. 
  • Balancing the draw to fight against drift. 

Key Takeaways:

  • Attention is the dog’s anchor. Give them a point to focus on that allows them to be neutral to everything else around.  You have to control a dog’s eyes to control their behavior. 
  • You want to lay the foundation for sending on command, not sending on agitation, and discriminating between the two early on in your training. 
  • Create neutrality through time on the field. 
  • No matter how advanced your dog is, keep working on your fundamentals. That is where the strength lies when you are in actual scenarios. 

“One of the most important fundamental exercises of attention is teaching the dog to look at me, then look at that, and then look back to me, and then look back to that, and change it up for the dog where I point the dog at different things that might be of concern to him.” —  Jerry Bradshaw

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: thedriveco.com 

The Drive Company Instagram: instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Dog Armour: dogarmour.com 

Dog Armour Instagram: instagram.com/dogarmourpro 

Rogue Arsenal: roguearsenal.com 

Rogue Arsenal Instagram: instagram.com/rogue_arsenal_official 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it. 

Navigating Fears and Phobias in Working Dogs

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw discusses:

  • Timing the puppy training early and with a directed purpose, and handling the fear periods in dogs.  
  • Habituation, spontaneous recovery, sensitization, and learned irrelevance.  
  • When to reorient and when to address fears. 
  • Understanding your dog’s phobias to learn how to solve the problem. 
  • Common fears and phobias seen in police and sport dogs.  

Key Takeaways:

  • Too many people restrict social and experiential learning in puppies during the critical stages of development out of fear. 
  • As a decoy, as a handler, as anyone working with a young dog, you need to be attentive to what you’re doing and always be surveying your environment to avoid unintended consequences. 
  • Avoid creating a problem that doesn’t already exist. Take a systematic approach to expose your dog to everything they need to be exposed to. 
  • Generally, fear periods are short-lived. Take your dog into more familiar places, more natural spaces, where it’s not going to encounter a lot of things that are going to be super unusual or might provoke a fearful response.

“I have a phobia about creating phobias. I don’t want to create a phobia in my dog, because the road is going to be super long to try and systematically desensitize to any type of stimuli that’s been created as an avoidance response.” —  Jerry Bradshaw

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Book Reference: 

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: thedriveco.com 

The Drive Company Instagram: instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Dog Armour: dogarmour.com 

Dog Armour Instagram: instagram.com/dogarmourpro 

Rogue Arsenal: roguearsenal.com 

Rogue Arsenal Instagram: instagram.com/rogue_arsenal_official 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it. 

Liberty Leash Project

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw, Ben Searle, and Gary Dawson discuss:

  • There is a need for highly trained service dogs for veterans. 
  • The origin story and vital mission of the Liberty Leash Project.
  • The importance of standardization and collaboration across service dog training.
  • Things to consider when going into the dog training business. 

Key Takeaways:

  • Service dogs are a medical implement for people and need to be trained to the highest standards. 
  • Training service dogs should be about collaboration, not competition. A village model builds the most resilient dogs and sustainable trainers.
  • Different dogs require different levels of handling ability and different levels of training ability. When it comes to pairing dogs with veterans, they also require different dogs for different people, as no two people and no two dogs require the exact same thing. 
  • If you’re interested in helping with the Liberty Leash Project, no matter your skill set, reach out to Gary and Ben at the contact information below. 

“We want these dogs to be these veterans’ battle buddies and help them through their tough times and grow from it and thrive from it.” —  Gary Dawson

Episode References:

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Ben, Gary, and Libery Leash Project: 

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: thedriveco.com 

The Drive Company Instagram: instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Dog Armour: dogarmour.com 

Dog Armour Instagram: instagram.com/dogarmourpro 

Rogue Arsenal: roguearsenal.com 

Rogue Arsenal Instagram: instagram.com/rogue_arsenal_official 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it. 

Idealism vs. Pragmatism in Canine Training: Behavioral Science with Dr. Stewart Hilliard

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw and Dr. Stewart Hilliard discuss:

  • Why your dog training should be based on theory, pragmatic results, and experience.
  • Theoretical vs intuitive dog training. 
  • How is idealist training different from pragmatic training? 
  • Why you should not be removing all stressors from your dog training. 
  • Control and learned helplessness.

Key Takeaways:

  • Dog training is a long series of lonely decisions. You are a team of one training your dog, and even if you have a coach, in the moment, you are the one making each decision based on the problem facing you in the moment.
  • Technical training is great, but you do need to be able to generalize the training for different locations and situations for the best results.
  • If, in the course of doing its job, your dog will face adversity, then having a background in overcoming some adversity in training is going to stand the dog in good stead.
  • There is considerable discussion and data that speak to the point that the ideal state for an animal to develop in is not necessarily one that is free of stress.
  • Aversive control can be used without producing bad welfare for the subjects of the training. On the flip side, excellent positive reinforcement technicians also produce really good results in dog training. 
  • Animals in avoidance are not running from something; they are running to something safe. 

“If you want to engage with dogs intellectually, they’re a very rich topic for intellectual engagement, because they’re super interesting. And you can look at them at any level you want; you can look at dog training at any level you want. And for some people, the pathway to getting really good is becoming theoretically very, very strong.” —  Dr. Stewart Hilliard

Episode References: 

  • Go to Kynology.org now and start an account to stay up to date on Kynology events, upcoming resources, and products!

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Stewart: 

Website: https://www.caninetrainingsystems.com/ 

Book: Schutzhund, Theory and Training Methods – A Book by Susan Barwig and Stewart Hilliard, Ph.D. – https://www.amazon.com/Schutzhund-Theory-Training-Methods-Reference/dp/0876057318

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: thedriveco.com 

The Drive Company Instagram: instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Dog Armour: dogarmour.com 

Dog Armour Instagram: instagram.com/dogarmourpro 

Rogue Arsenal: roguearsenal.com 

Rogue Arsenal Instagram: instagram.com/rogue_arsenal_official 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it. 

Training the PSA Carjack Exercise

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw discusses:

  • What judges are looking for during the PSA Carjack Exercise.
  • Safety precautions and training progressions for decoys, dogs, and trainers. 
  • Keeping your dog focused in the right place. 
  • Rewarding, capping, and knowing your dog’s limits.

Key Takeaways:

  • In training, you should be training in neutrality as you prepare for your PDC. Just because they have the skills in the exercise does not mean they are prepared for the neutrality between exercises. 
  • If you are able to, get a vehicle to train with your PSA club on these Carjack Exercises. There are a lot of progressions you can do as you work up to the full exercise.
  • It is the first impression of the aggression that’s going to catch the judge’s eye.
  • Spend time focusing on transitions. Even in PDC, there are transitions you can work on. A good transition can help you be well prepared. 

“One of the big mistakes I see is rushing into the vehicle without doing the proper neutrality to the vehicle when they’re younger, not doing the proper neutrality to the vehicle, where they now have to experience the bite work, in addition to the unstable footing, and in addition to the enclosed area, the tight space of the vehicle. All of these things impinge on the dog’s experience during that carjacking exercise.” — Jerry Bradshaw

Episode References: 

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: thedriveco.com 

The Drive Company Instagram: instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Dog Armour: dogarmour.com 

Dog Armour Instagram: instagram.com/dogarmourpro 

Rogue Arsenal: roguearsenal.com 

Rogue Arsenal Instagram: instagram.com/rogue_arsenal_official 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it.

Low Profile Equipment

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw discusses:

  • Bridging the gap from training to deployment with low-profile equipment. 
  • Comparing traditional and modern low-profile equipment.
  • Mistakes to avoid with low-profile equipment. 
  • Importance of having properly fitted equipment. 
  • Training progressions with low-profile equipment. 

Key Takeaways:

  • Ideally, low-profile equipment contains both lower visibility and lower odor profiles.
  • It is critical for the dog to feel the human underneath the equipment. While you should have protection, training the dog to find the human is also important.
  • If a dog can’t be satisfied with the bite they are getting on a suit, they may look for the human underneath and bite outside of the typical areas, such as ankles, which can cause more harm. 
  • Use training techniques like equipment shredding drills to improve the dog’s ability to find and get a successful bite.

“When we’re introducing the hidden equipment, usually we want to introduce it in such a way that we can maximize the dog’s experience, including having them in the right mood that we want them in when they’re experiencing this hidden equipment. We also want to have decoy safety.” —  Jerry Bradshaw

Episode References: 

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: https://thedriveco.com/ 

The Drive Company Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Dog Armour: http://www.dogarmour.com/ 

Rogue Arsenal: https://roguearsenal.com/ 

Find out more about Hold The Line Conference 2026 at https://htlk9.com/ 

Train Hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it.

Prosthetics for Street Readiness

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw discusses:

  • Pros and cons of prosthetics for canine training.
  • The importance of teaching your dog to find the human being in the bite.
  • Why training biting across different textures is key.
  • Tips for safely and effectively utilizing prosthetics in training. 

Key Takeaways:

  • When you’re trying to approximate down in training and are using equipment, you want to use equipment that is as thin as possible, but as thick as necessary.
  • If you’re beginning training with prosthetics, the arms can be a little easier to work with at first. 
  • Leverage your dog’s bite command right before they engage. If there is any confusion, leverage what they already know to get the behavior you’re looking for. 
  • Decoy schools should be teaching how to safely and properly incorporate prosthetic equipment. 

“Biting any kind of equipment, the dogs are going to get used to a texture that gives their teeth some purchase in that particular piece of equipment…And so we want to make sure that they’re willing to engage that new texture. We want to take advantage when we first introduce these things.” —  Jerry Bradshaw

Episode References:

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

The Drive Company: https://thedriveco.com/ 

The Drive Company Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Dog Armour: http://www.dogarmour.com/ 

Rogue Arsenal: https://roguearsenal.com/ 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-SturkieAudio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it.

Introduction to Kynology With Dr. Stewart Hilliard

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw and Dr. Stewart Hilliard discuss:

  • The debate between purely positive training and balanced training. 
  • How Kynology goes deeper than just basic dog training. 
  • Ways in which the scientific process in research can go wrong. 
  • The role of a canine trainer is to teach their dog to handle stress. 
  • Stewart’s two answers to the question “Why do you need aggression?”

Key Takeaways:

  • While there are about 25 research studies that create the canon of dog training, a lot of them are based on pure science or theory alone and do not actually understand the practicality of dog training. 
  • Research is often not replicated enough to know if the original model and data were structured and analyzed properly. 
  • Punishing behaviors into existence is not really a thing that happens in real life, human, ethical training. 
  • Good practitioners don’t teach with adversives. They use aversives to facilitate generalization of behaviors that are established using positive reinforcement and generalization of those behaviors to different physiological and emotional states.

“You and I, in February, are going to run a seminar under the aegis of kynology. It’s an effort…to provide really good, solid, formal education to other kynologists – which means people who are really, really interested in dogs, dog behavior, and learning. Not in a casual way, but those who want to know everything they can.” —  Dr. Stewart Hilliard

Episode References: 

  • Go to Kynology.org now and start an account to stay up to date on Kynology events, upcoming resources, and products!

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Stewart: 

Website: https://www.caninetrainingsystems.com/ 

Book: 

Schutzhund, Theory and Training Methods – A Book by Susan Barwig and Stewart Hilliard, Ph.D. – https://www.caninetrainingsystems.com/product/B-SCH-BAR/Schutzhund-Theory-and-Training-Methods-A-Book-by-Susan-Barwig-and-Stewart-Hilliard-PhD 

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training: www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon:   patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: https://thedriveco.com/ 

The Drive Company Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Find out more about Hold The Line Conference 2024 at https://htlk9.com/ 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it. 

Creating Independence: The Hunting Game

In this episode, Jerry Bradshaw discusses:

  • Canine independence – identifying the problem and how to solve it. 
  • Why you might need to be doing less obedience training. 
  • Training independence behaviors. 
  • Creating hunting games with progression for puppies of all ages. 
  • Working with your dog near and away from you so they are comfortable in both positions.

Key Takeaways:

  • Balance the inward and outward focus in your puppy training. 
  • Wind plays a very important role in the hunting games. The windier it is, the narrower the scent cone; the less wind, the wider it is. 
  • Watch your dog’s intensity and speed and adjust the game accordingly. You don’t want to push too fast, but you don’t want them to get bored either.
  • Progressive complexity should be done in a variable way. Some hunts should be easier and some should be harder. 
  • Do not step in and solve problems for your dog; work on independent work. That stops it from being independent work. 

“We’re trying to create independence. So it’s very important that when we start initiating these predatory sequences, the dog will start to, on his own, realize he and only he is going to be the one that can solve this problem, and you are irrelevant in this situation. And that’s exactly what we’re trying to teach, that there are going to be times where the dog has to work and you are going to be irrelevant.” —  Jerry Bradshaw

Get Jerry’s book Controlled Aggression on Amazon.com

Contact Jerry:

Website: controlledaggressionpodcast.com

Email: JBradshaw@TarheelCanine.com

Tarheel Canine Training:  www.tarheelcanine.com

YouTube:  tarheelcanine

Twitter: @tarheelcanine

Instagram: @tarheelk9

Facebook: TarheelCanineTraining

Protection Sports Website: psak9-as.org

Patreon: patreon.com/controlledaggression

Slideshare: Tarheel Canine

Calendly: https://calendly.com/tarheelcanine 

Tarheel Canine Seminars: https://streetreadyk9.com/ 

Tarheel Canine Student Portal: https://tcstudentportal.com/ 

Sponsors: 

ALM K9 Equipment: almk9equipment.com

PSA & American Schutzhund: psak9-as.org

Tarheel Canine: tarheelcanine.com

The Drive Company: https://thedriveco.com/ 

The Drive Company Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thedrive.co 

Find out more about Hold The Line Conference 2024 at https://htlk9.com/ 

Train hard, train smart, be safe.

Show notes by Podcastologist Chelsea Taylor-Sturkie

Audio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You’re the expert. Your podcast will prove it.