Joshua Tree gave us the perfect pressure test: new place, big distractions, tired dogs, and handlers who want off-leash freedom fast. I’m Meg, and I’m sharing the real takeaways from our desert weekend, from what went well to what slowed progress down. If you’ve ever said “I have marker words” but your dog still looks lost, this one will hit home.
We get into the unsexy fundamentals that make dog training work: picking one goal for a session, setting clean criteria, and using “yes” like it actually means something. I walk through a practical way to teach a verbal sit by pairing an unknown cue with a known cue, then show how I build engagement without begging for attention. You’ll also hear why I reward multiple times while moving backward, how I use a simple “go” food toss game to create focus, and what predictability looks like when you want reliable recall and calmer behavior around people and dogs.
Then we talk structure. Downtime, crate training, car crates, and an off switch are not optional if you’re doing active training or behavior modification. I explain why so many reactive or anxious dogs stay stuck in an impulse loop when they have too much freedom, and how clear consequences reduce stress instead of creating it. We also cover e-collar training, the difference between accountability and punishment, and why a tool can only add clarity if your foundation is already solid.
I close with a personal note on meditation and why handler impulse control matters more than most people think, plus a simple five-minute homework assignment you can start this week. If this helps you, subscribe, share it with a dog friend, and leave a review so more owners can find practical, balanced dog training that actually works.
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