k9wise This page is now part of Believe the Dog. Follow

Mindful dog training through co-regulation.

North GA • WNC • Online
Since 2012 • Veterinary-recommended

A new chapter.Believe the Dog.Mindful dog training through co-regulation.
03/11/2026

A new chapter.

Believe the Dog.
Mindful dog training through co-regulation.

A new chapter.

For many years, dogs, their humans, and veterinarians trusted my work under the name k9wise.

That work now continues under a new name.

Believe the Dog.

Mindful dog training.
Calm, clear communication.

Follow the work at .

Yogi, atop Chunky Gal Mountain, Nantahala National Forest.





Believe the Dog.Dogs are always communicating.Through posture.Through movement.Through breath.Through behavior.When some...
03/08/2026

Believe the Dog.

Dogs are always communicating.

Through posture.
Through movement.
Through breath.
Through behavior.

When something looks like defiance or stubbornness, the dog is usually telling us something important.

Stress.
Confusion.
Excitement.
Unmet needs.

Understanding begins when we slow down enough to observe clearly.

Because the dog is already telling the truth.

Mindful People • Mindful Dogs

Gene Long
Believe the Dog




People sometimes ask what mindfulness has to do with dog training.The answer is: everything.Dogs are constantly reading ...
03/07/2026

People sometimes ask what mindfulness has to do with dog training.

The answer is: everything.

Dogs are constantly reading the nervous systems of the people around them. Long before they understand a cue or a training plan, they feel our rhythm.

Breath is where that rhythm begins.

If you change the way you breathe, you change the way you feel — and the way others around you feel.

Dogs pick up on that immediately.

So much of the work I do with people and their dogs isn’t just about behavior.

It’s about awareness, regulation, and learning how to create a calm, steady presence that dogs can trust.

Believe the Dog

Mindful People
Mindful Dogs

— k9wise 🐾

If you’re your own coach, how do you know you have the best one?Just like with our dogs, setting them up for success mea...
03/07/2026

If you’re your own coach, how do you know you have the best one?

Just like with our dogs, setting them up for success means making sure they have the right coach.

The same is true in business. Having good guidance and a network of professionals you can learn from helps make sure you’re not just guessing your way forward.

From the very beginning, when I first started taking cases, I invested in one-on-one business coaching.

Over the years, I’ve continued that commitment — investing in both one-on-one and group coaching, and staying connected with a professional community of positive-reinforcement trainers.

It’s a place where trainers support one another in many aspects of the work, from the business side of running a practice to talking through challenging cases.

Just like doctors consult with colleagues, trainers sometimes compare notes when a situation calls for another perspective.

Being part of that kind of professional network means cases can benefit from shared experience and thoughtful collaboration.

Over time, I’ve also had the opportunity to talk through cases with fellow trainers when they’ve felt stuck, and to connect clients with trusted colleagues when another specialist might be the best fit.

In the end, that kind of collaboration benefits the dogs and the people who love them.

Mindful people
Mindful dogs

Believe the Dog

— k9wise

03/06/2026

Believe the dog.

— k9wise

Mindful peopleMindful dogs— k9wise 🐾    Western North CarolinaNorth Georgia MountainsOnline
03/06/2026

Mindful people
Mindful dogs

— k9wise 🐾






Western North Carolina
North Georgia Mountains
Online

Back with the Rescued Program today on a warm spring day after a short break.At the start of class, the men were eager t...
03/05/2026

Back with the Rescued Program today on a warm spring day after a short break.

At the start of class, the men were eager to share some wins.

Over the past few weeks they’ve been practicing what we work on together — helping the dogs learn to feel calm and safe.

And it shows.

Recently, several classes have taken place inside the dog dorm — with the dogs right there in the room.

Not long ago, that space would erupt with barking the moment someone new entered.

What the men and the dogs have created there now is something very different.

So today they showed me.

The officer and I walked into the dorm.

Not a single bark.

The men also showed me the dogs calmly waiting their turn to come out of their crates, one at a time, to head outside — passing within inches of the other dogs through the wire crates along the way — again, not a single bark. Just calm, happy, relaxed and curious dogs.

Then we moved outside to the yard.

Watching the connection between the men and the dogs — the lovely leash manners, the easy recalls, the quiet understanding between them — was breathtaking to see.

At the end, each dog got a moment to run free in the yard, which was a joy for all of us to watch.

As the day moves on and I head to other work, I find myself still reflecting on what we all witnessed together.

Small moments.

Patient work.

Trust growing on both ends of the leash.

Proud of the men and the dogs — and grateful for the way they continue to trust the process.

Most dogs are doing dozens of things right every day.We just forget to notice.One of the simplest training exercises I r...
03/05/2026

Most dogs are doing dozens of things right every day.
We just forget to notice.

One of the simplest training exercises I recommend comes from trainer Kathy Sdao: SMART x 50.

SMART stands for:
See, Mark And Reward Training.

The goal is simple:
Reinforce 50 things your dog does right every day.

Not commands.
Not formal training sessions.

Just life.

Your dog looks at you instead of barking out the window?
See it. Mark it. Reward it.

Your dog lies down quietly while you drink coffee?
See it. Mark it. Reward it.

Your dog walks beside you instead of pulling?
See it. Mark it. Reward it.

Your dog chooses calm over chaos?
Definitely reinforce that.

When we start noticing and reinforcing the good choices dogs are already making, something shifts.

Dogs offer more of those choices.

Calm becomes valuable.
Learning becomes easier.

Try it tomorrow.

Just start counting how many good decisions your dog makes.

Dog folks in Western North Carolina — try this tomorrow and see what happens.

Mindful people
Mindful dogs

— k9wise 🐾






Photo & training: Gene Long / k9wise

For YogiMy heart.My soul.My teacher.In 2012, I enrolled in the Karen Pryor Academy for one reason: to become a better pe...
03/05/2026

For Yogi

My heart.
My soul.
My teacher.

In 2012, I enrolled in the Karen Pryor Academy for one reason: to become a better person for him. I wasn’t trying to start a business. I simply wanted to understand dogs better so I could do right by the dog who meant everything to me.

While I was there, something unexpected happened.

Working alongside Yogi and learning under an exceptional instructor, Laurie Luck, I discovered the work that felt most natural to me — helping dogs and humans understand each other.

The trainer I had hired earlier to help with Yogi later invited me to volunteer teaching group classes in a jail dogs program at a county jail. That invitation would end up shaping the direction of my work in ways I couldn’t have imagined at the time.

Neighbors who had seen me out walking Yogi alongside the family’s dogs — dogs who had pulled their people around for years — began to notice something different.

The group walked on loose leashes, and at intersections they would stop and sit together in unison. The dogs loved doing it.

Soon neighbors began asking for help with their own dogs. That’s when I first began to consider working with clients professionally.

Through all of it, everything I was learning, practicing, and figuring out in those early years started with Yogi.

One of the first serious cases I took on involved a family in my neighborhood whose two dogs had begun having serious conflicts. One dog would attack the other seemingly out of nowhere. The incidents were becoming more frequent, leading to frightening and expensive after-hours emergency vet visits and giving the family a growing sense of hopelessness.

It was the kind of case most new trainers might avoid. But I believed I could help them — I had recently completed a course designed specifically for trainers working aggression cases.

I worked with the family, and the attacks stopped.

They were among my earliest clients, and we stayed in touch over the years. There was never another incident between the dogs. They went on to live long, happy lives together.

When I began going into people’s homes professionally, I started noticing something.

Over the years I’ve occasionally heard people say something like,
“Wow… my dog usually avoids people, but he wants to interact with you.”

At the time I didn’t understand why. Later I began to see what might be happening.

Looking back, I began to understand what they were responding to. Years of breath work and mindfulness training had already shaped my nervous system. Over time I realized dogs seemed to respond to that.

As a caregiver and director of a nonprofit respite care program supporting people living with dementia and their families, I worked in trauma-informed care — experience that later shaped how I worked with the humans on the other end of the leash.

Learning and practicing Nonviolent Communication further deepened that work.

Over time, these experiences came together and shaped my own approach to helping dogs and the people who care for them.

This work became about more than training dogs — it became about helping nervous systems find steadiness together.

The work kept growing. Word of mouth spread. Veterinarians, trainers, and behaviorists began referring people to me. Along the way I also became a mentor for trainers in a dog training academy.

After a few years assisting with the Rescued Program at the jail, the trainers I worked with asked me to lead it — a real honor.

Today I continue working with dogs and their people, supporting trainer development, and leading training at the jail, where I volunteer my time.

In many ways, my work in this field began there. What started as volunteer work has remained a way for me to serve both the men in the program and the rescue dogs in their care — dogs learning the skills they need to become adoptable and stay successfully in their forever homes, while the men themselves are changed through learning and practicing positive reinforcement.

Yogi passed a couple of years ago.

He was one of a kind. Irreplaceable.

I will never stop grieving him.

Everything I’ve been able to do in this field traces back to Yogi.

This work — and whatever good comes from it — belongs to him.

Last session I mentioned how much I love plants and admired a client’s beautiful aloe. I also confessed that mine had re...
03/04/2026

Last session I mentioned how much I love plants and admired a client’s beautiful aloe. I also confessed that mine had recently died.

Today they surprised me with this little one, in a beautiful pot — almost k9wise orange.

Thank you for such a thoughtful gift. Small gestures like this mean a lot. 🌱🧡

Calm guidance will always outperform intimidation.Much of dog training isn’t really about the dog.It’s about helping peo...
03/04/2026

Calm guidance will always outperform intimidation.

Much of dog training isn’t really about the dog.

It’s about helping people discover how much calm and clarity can change behavior.

Change how the human shows up,
and the dog often changes immediately.

Have you seen that happen?

Mindful people
Mindful dogs

— k9wise 🐾




Address

Hayesville, NC

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 7pm
Tuesday 9am - 7pm
Wednesday 9am - 7pm
Thursday 9am - 7pm
Friday 9am - 7pm
Saturday 9am - 7pm
Sunday 9am - 7pm

Telephone

+14707339333

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