Leadership 4 Paws Pet Training, LLC

Leadership 4 Paws Pet Training, LLC Michele Fisher & Angie Boggs have been servicing pets since 1994. Certified dog & cat trainer They are proud members of the IACP, PSI and APDT.

The owners, Michele Fisher and Angie Boggs, have both been trained in a veterinary hospital and both come highly recommended from area veterinarians. Michele graduated from Animal Behavior College in 2002 and continues with training and behavior education. They are animal lovers of all kinds and have several of their own. A positive approach to the basic praise obedience training class is availabl

e for puppies and adult dogs. By using a balance of meaningful rewards, human correction and understanding, we create and effective training program. We teach owners how to live with their dogs the way that will encourage them to become an obedient member of the family. Your dog will learn basic commands and can also help your dog with any behavioral problems. Private one on one lessons and group classes are also available. In addition, Michele is a certified AKC Canine Good Citizen Evaluator and a Certified Mentor Trainer with the Animal Behavior College shaping students to become trainers. We offer the Military a discount for their service to our country and to those who have recently adopted their dogs.

02/22/2026

THE "WOBBLE" IS A METABOLIC CRASH.
If you see an opossum staggering across your patio in broad daylight this February, do not reach for the shovel.
He is not "groggy." He is not "acting crazy." He is in the final stages of a physiological shutdown.

The Myth: The "Daylight Rabies" Panic
In the United States, we are culturally conditioned to view any nocturnal animal active during the day—especially one moving unsteadily—as rabid.
The Reality: For the Virginia Opossum (Didelphis virginiana), this diagnosis is statistically improbable. Opossums have a naturally low body temperature (roughly 94°F-97°F) which makes it difficult for the rabies virus to survive and replicate in their systems.
If an opossum is wobbling in February, the culprit is almost certainly Metabolic Collapse, not a virus.

The Scientific Reality: Hypoglycemic Shock & Ataxia
The staggering gait you are witnessing is clinically known as Ataxia (loss of motor control). In late winter, this is a critical alarm bell indicating that the animal's blood glucose and core temperature have dropped below the threshold required to coordinate its own muscles.

The Tropical Hangover: Opossums are evolutionary migrants from the tropics (South America). They lack a thick underfur and do not hibernate. They are biologically ill-equipped for American winters.

The Brain Starvation: The brain is a glucose-dependent organ. When an opossum spends days sheltering from a February freeze without eating, it burns through its fat reserves. When blood sugar plummets (Hypoglycemia), the cerebellum—the part of the brain controlling balance—fails to function.

The "Wobble": The stumble isn't aggression; it is the visible symptom of a brain starved of fuel.

What is Happening Right Now (February)
We are in the "Starvation Moon."
Right now, food sources (insects, fruit, carrion) are at their absolute seasonal low.

Forced Foraging: Extreme hunger forces opossums to forage during the day when temperatures are slightly higher, breaking their nocturnal habit.

Frostbite: You may see damage to their naked ears and tails (necrosis). This physical pain, combined with starvation, puts them in a catabolic state—they are breaking down their own muscle tissue just to keep their heart beating.

Why This Matters Ecologically
The opossum is the "sanitation engineer" of the forest. They consume thousands of ticks per season (reducing Lyme disease risk), eat cockroaches, and clean up carrion.
Losing a breeding-age individual to preventable starvation right before spring creates a gap in this crucial cleanup crew. A "wobbly" opossum is not dead yet; it is salvageable.

Practical Action: The Triage Protocol
This is a medical emergency. Time is the enemy.

Stop Filming: Do not watch to see if he "walks it off." He won't.

The Capture: Opossums are generally non-aggressive when weak. Use thick gardening gloves or a heavy towel to gently scoop him into a high-sided box or cat carrier.

The Heat Protocol (CRITICAL): You must provide external heat. Fill a hot water bottle (wrap it in a towel so it doesn't burn the skin) or use a heating pad on "Low" under half the box. This arrests the hypothermia.

No Food Yet: Do not force-feed. A cold animal cannot digest; food will rot in the stomach or cause aspiration. You must warm them up before they can metabolize calories.

The Call: Contact a licensed wildlife rehabilitator immediately. They can administer subcutaneous fluids and dextrose (sugar) injections to reverse the crash.

The Verdict
A stagger is not a walk. It is a biological SOS.
The battery is empty.
Pick him up. Warm him up. Make the call.

Scientific References & Evidence
Rabies Resistance: Krause, W. J., & Krause, W. A. (2006). The Opossum: Its Amazing Story. (Details the low body temperature mechanism that inhibits rabies replication).

Winter Physiology: Kanda, L. L. (2005). Winter energetics of Virginia opossums. Journal of Mammalogy. (Documents the metabolic limits and high mortality rates of opossums in northern winters).

Hypoglycemia/Ataxia: National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association (NWRA). "Standards for Wildlife Rehabilitation." (Protocols distinguishing metabolic collapse from neurological disease).

Louie and Miss Phoebe hanging.😉
05/06/2025

Louie and Miss Phoebe hanging.😉

11/18/2024

STOP giving free dogs away. This pup didn't deserve the two weeks of torture as a bait dog that he received. Please stop putting your pets on Facebook and Craigslist. These are hot spots for people looking for bait dogs and cats. -------Thank you again for sharing and getting the word out.!!!!🙏

11/16/2024
10/23/2024

Today is , a reminder that knowing how to save a life—especially our furry friends—can make all the difference. While having to administer CPR to your pet can be terrifying, being prepared can help you act calmly and confidently in an emergency.

Stay Calm:
1️⃣ Breathe: Take a few deep breaths to steady yourself. Focus on the feeling of the air filling your lungs.
2️⃣ Delegate: If there are bystanders, assign them tasks like finding the nearest emergency vet.
3️⃣ Focus: Keep your mind clear. Concentrate on the steps ahead and stay in the moment.

When to Start CPR:
🐾 Your pet isn’t responding
🐾 Your pet isn’t breathing
🐾 You can’t feel a heartbeat or pulse

How to Perform CPR:
Compressions:
❤️ Position your pet on their side.
❤️ Deliver 120 compressions per minute (2 per second).
❤️ For every 30 compressions, give 2 breaths.

Breaths:
❤️ Close your pet’s mouth and seal it with your fingers.
❤️ Cover their nose with your mouth and give 2 breaths—enough to make their chest rise.
❤️ Check for a heartbeat after 2 minutes. If there’s no pulse, continue.

When to Stop CPR:
🐾 Your pet starts breathing and responding
🐾 You reach the vet clinic and they take over
🐾 You can’t continue physically
🐾 Your pet starts breathing but is still unconscious

Recovery Position:
Place your pet’s head to the side, slightly tilting down (unless there’s head trauma).

Compression Techniques:
🐶 Medium to Large Dogs: Compress one third of the chest depth.
🐱 Small Dogs/Cats: Use your thumb and fingers for compression, or compress directly over the heart.

Stay prepared and know that you can make a difference in your pet's life! ❤️

10/02/2024

Many of you will be buying pumpkins these days. Instead of trashing them at the end of the season, you can put them in the garden or throw them in the woods. Squirrels and other critters such as possums, badgers, deer, foxes and birds also love pumpkin, so let the forest animals enjoy the leftovers after Halloween.🍁🎃🍁

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Arlington, VA
22204

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