Check out these great tricks performed by Kiko and Splash. Can your dog do any of these tricks? I think my dog can sit and that’s about it. Enjoy!
Charlie had his first veterinary appointment today. While he will cheerfully allow me to handle him any way I like, being handled by strangers is still a completely different story. So I brought him in by himself (I usually bring the dogs in as a pack, as they’re all very easy to handle). And I brought a muzzle.
The spectre of young Charlie wearing this lovely bit of apparel, along with the blinkless stare and completely even, 60 bpm pulse rate he maintained throughout the examination earned him the charming new nickname.
I’ll admit that the little shit looked astonishingly evil, even to me. When I took him back out to the van I left the muzzle on until I got him into the crate. Once he was safely inside, I slipped the muzzle off and shut the crate door in a single swift move (I may be a gimp, but I can still move pretty darn quickly when I need to). Once the door was closed, I was surprised – and quite pleased – to see a soft, happy, wiggly puppy on the other side. I opened the door back up and the vicious killer my happy puppy greeted me with a wagging tail and a flurry of soft, sloppy kisses.
I am so glad I spent all that time getting him used to wearing the muzzle.
Once we returned home, Charlie released his stress by viciously attacking wrestling with Audie.

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Write to Dr. Jacki, ASK THE VET
- Ring the doorbell and send your dogs to their "place", "spot", "bed" or other permanently named location for greeting.
- I will use the commands, STAY and DOWN, to get the message across further.
- Treat the pups after I pet them, if they stay put in their spots.
- Release them after a short stay and practice again.
- Repeat several times a day, and Thanksgiving could mean calmer greetings from my "happy-to-meet-you" pups.
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