
Goldstar German Shepherds & Rottweilers
All Breed Dog Training & Service Dog Center
702-
Service Dog Certification & Registration
Home * Puppies * Boarding * Potty Training, Basic & Advanced Obedience
Service Dog Info * Service Dog Accessories & Supplies * Health Guarantee * Microchipping
Service Dog Certification (How & Why) * Obtaining/Purchasing a Service Dog * Temperament Test
At The Airport/Flying With Your Service Dog/TSA Recommendations * Donations
The Dog Shoppe:Unique Canine Photo License Plates, T-
Questions or Comments? Use the form at the bottom of the page.
The Trainer’s Corner has been added to this site to answer dog training related questions, inspire creative thinking and problem solving, and to give a voice to those that have solid ideas and dog training techniques and would like to share those ideas and techniques with others.
If you have an idea, philosophy, or an effective dog training technique that you would like to see posted on this site, please submit it to: goldstar252@gmail.com. We want to give proper credit for these submitted ideas so please be certain to place your name, and the city and state in which you reside in the subject line. Should your idea or technique be listed we will include your name and city/state of residence. Goldstar Dog Training reserves the right to list or publish any of the ideas, philosophies, or techniques submitted. Your submitted ideas may cover any area of dog training...potty training, basic or advanced obedience training, personal or home protection, guard dog training, trick training, service dog training, etc. We look forward to receiving your submissions!
“The first rule of dog training is, there are no set rules. Dog training requires very fluid and creative thinking. You must be flexible in your techniques, therefore you must be flexible in your thinking and philosophies”. To be otherwise is to set yourself up for frustration and to set your dog up for failure. Submitted by E. Saunders, of Pahrump, NV.
“Never call your dog to you and then attempt to punish it! If you do so, you are ultimately going to cause your dog to show reluctance to come on command. To discipline your dog, particularly in the early stages of training, you should be connected to the dog by way of a training lead and some sort of training collar”. Submitted by R. Coursey, of Atlantic City, NJ.
“Dog training requires 20% persistence, 20% patience, 20% practice, 20% common sense, and 20% skill”. Submitted by E. Saunders, of Pahrump, NV.
If I am trying to train a dog that has behavioral issues I always look to the environment first to find the cause of the problem. If the cause isn’t environmental, I look at the dog owner for the cause. If it isn’t either the environment or owner at fault, I then suspect the dog. The dog always gets the benefit of the doubt! Submitted by E. Saunders, of Pahrump, NV.
“Praise and punishment are two sides of the same coin. Without doubt, this is the currency that must be used in order to train a dog”. Submitted by E. Saunders, of Pahrump, NV.
Before the technical aspects of dog training may be implemented there are certain mental preparations and thought processes that you, the dog trainer, must make. Often the morals, personal values, and pure love for a dog prevent the dog’s owner from actually seeing a problem and/or a solution to the problem. When problem behavior erupts or is anticipated, the puzzle of the behavior is more quickly solved by detaching yourself emotionally from the situation and looking at the problem objectively and realistically.






Goldstar German Shepherds & Rottweilers:
All Breed Dog Training & Service Dog Center
5050 Jalapa Place
Pahrump, Nevada 89060-
702-



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