by Vanesssa Taylor | Dec 12, 2025 | Basic & Advanced Obedience, Behavioral Dog Training, Dog Training Insights, Puppy Training
Dog visitor training is one of the most common struggles I see with clients. If your dog turns into a completely different dog the second someone walks through the door, you are not alone. Most dogs are calm all day… until the door opens. Then it’s jumping, barking,...
by Vanesssa Taylor | Nov 11, 2024 | Behavioral Dog Training, Dog Training Insights
Why dogs bark is one of the most common problems dog owners struggle with—especially when it starts happening constantly in real life. A dog barking at the window, reacting on walks, or making noise when left alone quickly becomes frustrating. Most owners try to stop...
by Vanesssa Taylor | Oct 15, 2024 | Dog Training Insights
Long leashes for dogs are one of the most underrated tools when it comes to real-life behavior. Most dog owners either keep their dog on a short leash… or let them off completely. That gap in between is where problems happen. No control or too much restriction leads...
by Vanesssa Taylor | Sep 15, 2024 | Dog Training Insights
Mental stimulation for dogs is one of the biggest missing pieces when dogs don’t listen, bark excessively, or seem constantly restless. Most owners focus on walks and physical exercise. But your dog can be physically tired… and still mentally wired. That’s when...
by Randy Garcia | May 21, 2024 | Basic & Advanced Obedience, Behavioral Dog Training, Dog Training Insights, Leash & Reactivity Training, Puppy Training
Private dog training for real life behavior works best when training is built around your dog, your routines, and the problems you actually live with every day. At Pup’s & Paws, that is exactly how we help dog owners make real progress. A lot of owners want a dog...
by Randy Garcia | Apr 14, 2024 | Dog Training Insights
Martingale collar solves one of the most common and dangerous problems during walks: dogs slipping out of their collar. Many dogs walk fine… until something triggers them. A loud noise, another dog, or sudden excitement — and suddenly they pull back, twist, and slip...