Camp K9 Training

Camp K9 Training Dog Training Dog Trainer

04/29/2026

“My dog needs sedation for nails.”

A phrase I hear way too often… and most of the time, it didn’t start there.

We usually end up here for one of two reasons…
A bad experience early on, or not enough positive exposure to the tools in the first place.

So how do we fix it?

It’s not a quick hack. It’s a process.

Start with trust… real trust, not forced compliance.
Then build communication so your dog actually understands what’s being asked.
Give them an outlet… a job… somewhere for that pent-up energy to go before you even touch their paws.

Then comes true counterconditioning… and no, it’s not just flashing a dremel and handing out treats.

It’s timing… position… environment… pressure… duration… affection.
All of it matters. Miss one piece, and the dog feels it.

Done right, though, everything changes.

If you’re struggling with nail trims, start today.
Not just to avoid sedation… but because the level of trust you can build through this process is on another level.

Now go train.

04/21/2026

Just another day in the kennel…

3 dogs putting in work on the treadmill,
3 locked in on their climbs,
2 dialing in their door manners.
1 working on crate calmness

Not all of them are moving, but every single one is working mentally.

That’s what real work looks like… and what proper socialization actually is

04/15/2026

Most people think tiring a dog out means letting them run wild at doggy daycare…

But exhaustion isn’t the same as fulfillment.

15 minutes of controlled backward treadmill work does more than hours of chaotic play ever will.

Walking backward builds rear-end awareness, strengthens joints, improves coordination, and actually engages your dog mentally. It’s structured… intentional… and low-impact.

Doggy daycare?
Overstimulation… bad habits… adrenaline spikes… and teaching your dog to ignore pressure.

One builds clarity and control.
The other builds chaos.

If your goal is a calmer, more responsive dog… start working smarter, not just harder.

03/31/2026

Let’s talk treadmill.
It’s by far one of my favorite tools… and here’s why.

It works dogs mentally even more than physically.
Almost every dog that comes into my program has excess energy, and when we don’t work dogs to their full potential, that energy starts to build up.

Energy always finds an outlet.
That’s when good dogs start becoming anxious, jumpy, fearful… and in some cases, reactive or even bite.

Think about it this way… if you sat in a cubicle all day with no structure, no routine, and no mental stimulation, you’d feel the same pressure building up.

The process isn’t always easy at first.
The dog may feel stressed in the beginning, but with proper leash pressure, clear timing, and well-placed rewards, progress happens quickly.

If you make it to 2:54, you’ll see exactly what I mean.

This is day one.
Imagine where Koda will be in 14 days.

03/26/2026

Round two… was this fair?
Drop your thoughts in the comments!

Sound on if you wanna hear the answer🙃

03/18/2026

Just a little triple action with the most “naughty” boys…

Looking to run 10 seminars this year!
If you have a space, or want me to come speak/train dogs, let’s chat.

03/14/2026

Do you think this was a fair correction?

Let’s break it down.

Khaos (Malinois) is on her climb doing her job.

Rhea (Dal) is running around bothering her.

Khaos tries to spin away and face the other direction a few times… but the puppy isn’t picking up on those cues yet.

After a few spins, Khaos gets tired of it and snaps.

Enough to scare her… not enough to hurt her.

So yes… 100%.

However…

Khaos is a very well balanced dog, and the only reason I let it go that far is because I knew she would give a fair correction.

Most of the time, older dogs will snap too hard. That’s why I tell clients to be careful letting young puppies interact with older dogs that have little to no training and aren’t balanced enough to give fair corrections.

This is exactly why I use Khaos to help raise puppies… and not Eros.

Hope that helps… now go do some climb training

03/13/2026

Let’s talk pressure.

Nobody likes using it. Sometimes it’s hard to watch the little temper tantrums our dogs throw when we introduce it. But it can be one of the most valuable things we give them.

Like any tool, it can be used the wrong way. Honestly, food gets misused all the time too… don’t believe me? Tell me your dog isn’t overweight.

My goal through these videos is to show that every tool, whether it’s food, affection, leash pressure, or anything else, can be used in a way that truly helps our dogs. The real skill is timing, using the right amount, and staying consistent so progress becomes clear, fast, and reliable.

Now go train.

03/03/2026

Let’s talk about pressure.

TIG loves going up and down the stairs on his own…. but the moment he’s asked to do something he doesn’t feel like doing, the middle fingers come out. These three videos, filmed over just 2½ minutes, show the progression clearly.

This is why introducing dogs to light pressure early matters. Not caving, calmly following through, and rewarding the right decision are all critical pieces of training from the start. It doesn’t take much to stop a temper tantrum, but if a dog learns they can avoid things simply by refusing or protesting, that becomes a real problem later.

Down the road, we won’t just be asking for stairs… we may need cooperation during something important like handling at the vet or moving safely in a stressful moment. Going down the stairs is basic. Learning how to work through pressure and make the right choice is the real lesson.

EROS IS OKAY.The biggest reason I’m sharing this is perspective. Leash training. Desensitizing. Muzzle conditioning. Put...
02/27/2026

EROS IS OKAY.

The biggest reason I’m sharing this is perspective. Leash training. Desensitizing. Muzzle conditioning. Putting your dog through structured stress on purpose is the work that matters.

When your dog is critical, strangers are restraining them. They’re inserting IVs. They’re pulling a drainage tube out of your dog’s stomach. They’re applying pressure to painful areas. Your dog is scared and confused.

Sit, down shake and roll over will not help you in that moment.

What helps is a dog that understands leash pressure. A dog that has been handled everywhere. A dog that is conditioned to a muzzle and does not panic when it goes on. A dog that has learned how to work through stress instead of fight it.

Training is not about tricks. It is about preparing your dog for real life, especially the worst days.

Super thankful for the staff at NC State Veterinary Hospital for taking care of his sepsis and performing emergency surgery that saved his life!

Now go do muzzle training!

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Downtown Raleigh, NC

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 6pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 6pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 6pm

Telephone

+19195194600

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