Michele Welton has been training and showing dogs for
nearly 30 years. She is an obedience instructor and
behavioral consultant and the author of four published
pet books. |
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Corene Stormant:
"I collect dog training books and this one is at the top of my short list. I highly recommend it. You will learn TONS of useful information from this book!"
Shomir Banerjee:
"Your book is simply amazing. It went far beyond my expectations. I believe it is going to be the single best investment I have ever made, when it comes to my dog."
Albert Bakos:
"I am flabbergasted at how much information this book has. I seriously think you should be charging $30 or $40 for this much information. All the other training books come no where near this one."
Donna Yost:
"I was extremely impressed by your information. First of all you give lots
of it, almost 350 pages. And second the information is all useful, practical
stuff that dog owners can do every day."
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Why An
Educated Dog Is Happier |
- Educated dogs are happy because they're appreciated and complimented by everyone who meets them.
- Everyone loves a dog who is well-mannered! And because they are so
well-behaved, they can do more things and go more
places with you.
- Educated dogs are happy because they know the
consequences of every behavior.
- They know which behaviors they can do to get praise, petting, and rewards. And they know
which behaviors they SHOULDN'T do, so they can easily avoid being
scolded.
- Educated dogs are happy because they've learned what
your human sounds mean.
- Like anyone who learns a foreign language, they feel empowered because they understand what you're saying.
- And educated dogs are SMARTER because their brain
has been developed.
- The simple act of teaching your dog anything makes his brain
stronger and faster, which in turn makes him more successful learning
OTHER things. In other words, his intelligence and learning skills start
to "snowball" with the very first thing you teach -- and keep right on
snowballing with every new word!
Now... what dog wouldn't love all
that? |
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Copyright © 2000 by
Michele Welton. All rights reserved. No part of this website may be
reproduced without the permission of the author. |
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