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Memberships

ASA Service Dogs Charity

78 members • Free

Cool Dog Skool

133 members • $97/month

Public Access Prep School

281 members • Free

Paradigm K9 Dog Training

240 members • Free

54 contributions to ASA Service Dogs Charity
Ollie after his spa day 🧖
Be honest … what does Ollie’s new hairdo remind you of? 🤣
Ollie after his spa day 🧖
1 like • 27d
@Amanda Taulborg lol 😂 I was certain that was the lyrics
2 likes • 27d
@Sherry Smith me too 🙋🏻‍♀️
🐕‍🦺 Service Dogs & Other Dogs in Public
If you’re training a service dog (or thinking about it), this is a great example of what we’re aiming for when dogs see other dogs in public. Notice where the dogs’ attention is. Instead of staring at each other, they’re checking in with their handlers. That comes from a lot of eye-contact work at home and in low-distraction spaces first, so when real-world distractions show up, the dog already knows, “my human has the answers.” 👀✨ You’ll also see us practicing a come on leash. If a leash is ever dropped or there’s an unexpected moment, the dog needs to respond immediately, even around other dogs. And at the end, you’ll see Free Dog 🎉 Clear working time, clear release. The dogs get to decompress and get that extra reinforcement for doing such a good job staying neutral and focused. This is what we’re looking for in public access work: calm dogs, soft bodies, focused minds, and handlers giving clear, consistent guidance 🐾💛
🐕‍🦺 Service Dogs & Other Dogs in Public
1 like • 27d
What a great group. Wish I lived local to train with you all.
🐾 Sandy’s first trip to the skate park 🛹💛
Sandy and her handler Reagan absolutely rocked training today! New environment. Big sounds. Moving boards. And Sandy showed up ready to learn. She earned positive reinforcement the whole way—food rewards, praise, pets, and plenty of encouragement. She also got a well-earned “Free Dog” release for listening confidently and being such a good girl. Desensitization is all about slow introductions. Balancing distractions and new environments with: - positive reinforcement - clear handling and guidance - breaks - fun - and extra love 💛 That’s how confidence is built. Sandy is learning how to be big, brave, and awesome—one experience at a time—and she’s well on her way to becoming an incredible service dog.
🐾 Sandy’s first trip to the skate park 🛹💛
1 like • Jan 13
Sandy is a Super Star. I love her calm vibe as the guys are riding their skateboards and how she checks in with her handler.
Lets see your dog’s ‘Off Duty’ Look!
Alright doggo friends… I need to see your dogs living their BEST goofy, off-duty (aka “free dog”) life. Post a pic of your service dog (or pet) being a total happy potato! 😂🐶
Lets see your dog’s ‘Off Duty’ Look!
1 like • Dec '25
@Amanda Taulborg we haven’t had any problems with other dogs at Huntington. We get there 3pm or later, so usually only a few people before sundown. This last time right before it was completely dark about 4 people on electric bikes that look like and sound like motorcycles unexpectedly zoomed by us about 10 feet away from us while we were walking by the water on the shore & my dogs charged after them. Riley recalled quickly, but Amica chased them for a bit. Had I known they were approaching or this was a possibility I would have recalled her & had her on lead, until they passed, but they caught us off guard. 😬 Interesting that when we’re up on the sidewalk and people go by on bikes, skateboards, roller skates and she’s on the lead she’s alert, but doesn’t try and chase them.
1 like • Dec '25
@Amanda Taulborg I like that you hang out at skateboard parks to familiarize your dogs with the different sights & sounds. We definitely need to add that to our To Do List 📝 Yes, both dogs definitely had a startle response, so we gotta work on that so that when they’re startle they can have another option to move into heel position instead of chase the thing that startled them.
Service Dogs Aren’t Fearless Robots — They’re Dogs. And That’s a GOOD Thing!  🧠💛
There’s a pretty common misconception floating around that service dogs are supposed to be these elite, fearless, never-flinch, never-blink machines. But… yeah. No. That’s not real life. 😂 Just like humans — even the most confident, badass humans you can think of — every dog has fears. Fear is instinctual. So the goal with service dogs is not to create a dog that never gets scared. The goal is to create a dog that knows what to do when something does scare them… and that comes from training + communication + trust. 🧠 So what actually matters for a service dog? Not “fearlessness.” But how they handle fear when it pops up. A well-trained service dog, when startled, should have this instinct: 👉 “Check in with my human. What do you want me to do?” THAT is the magic. THAT is the safety. THAT is why training matters so much. Because the opposite reaction — the instinctual bolt/run/flee moment — is dangerous for the dog, the handler, AND the public. And that’s exactly what we want to prevent. 💪 Training creates the communication that replaces instinct. Training opens up a line of communication: - The dog learns: “When I’m unsure, I check in.” - The handler learns: “When my dog is unsure, I guide them.” That’s the whole game. It doesn’t mean your dog won’t ever spook at something dropping behind them. Humans jump too! It just means they recover quickly and look to you instead of relying on instinct. 🎯 Your job as a handler Your job is to: - Notice when they’re unsure - Take a moment to work them through it - Help them build confidence - Prevent small startles from turning into big fears That’s how you create a dog who is: 🐶 well-desensitized 🐶 safe in public 🐶 thinking instead of reacting 🐶 checking in instead of bolting 🐶 trusting their human instead of their instincts 💛 Bottom line Service dogs aren’t fearless superheroes. They’re dogs — with instincts, emotions, and the occasional “shaky boots” moment. The real strength is this: When fear shows up, they use their brain instead of their instincts, and they trust their handler enough to ask, “What now?”
Service Dogs Aren’t Fearless Robots — They’re Dogs. And That’s a GOOD Thing!   🧠💛
1 like • Dec '25
@Amanda Taulborg I gotta set up ChatGPT and familiarize myself so I can just push a button and take notes. I do it the old fashioned way on the notes app. 😉
1 like • Dec '25
@Kenzie Carlson right, ppl can put unrealistic expectations on dogs, because they see a highly trained mature 5+ years and think all dogs should behave that way. I have to remind myself too that the trainers that I respect on YouTube all there dogs are over 5years and even then it’s the highlight reels.
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Anissa Stark
5
347points to level up
@carissa-stark-1151
Welcome to Stark K9 Academy. Where our two Super Pups Amica & Riley are learning all sorts of wonderful skills to complete special missions.

Active 27d ago
Joined Jul 28, 2025