Bark Busters Reviews and Customer Testimonials
28th July 2014 - Kevin McDonnell
Kevin dealt with Aggression, Puppy management
26th July 2014 - Lee Hardy
Lee dealt with Aggression, Barking, Jumping up, Pulling
25th July 2014 - Lee Hardy
Lee dealt with Barking, Jumping up, Pulling, Recall
18th July 2014 - Lynn Prentice
Lynn dealt with Hyperactivity, Pulling
16th July 2014 - Estelle Jackson
Estelle dealt with Hyperactivity, Jumping up, Pulling
12th July 2014 - Lynn Prentice
Lynn dealt with Barking, Jumping up, Pulling, Recall, Separation anxiety
8th July 2014 - Lee Hardy
Lee dealt with Barking, Jumping up
8th July 2014 - Kevin McDonnell
Kevin dealt with Barking, Jumping up, Pulling, Puppy management, Recall
8th July 2014 - Kevin McDonnell
Kevin dealt with Aggression, Barking, Jumping up, Pulling, Recall
7th July 2014 - Kevin McDonnell
Kevin dealt with Hyperactivity, Jumping up, Pulling, Recall, Separation anxiety, Sibling rivalry
3rd July 2014 - Alex Fraser
Alex dealt with Aggression, Barking, Chewing, Digging, Hyperactivity, Jumping up, Pulling, Puppy management, Recall, Other
Taking on a puppy can be hard work, even for those people that have always had dogs. So taking on your first puppy can be a real worry for some people. I frequently get asked "are we doing it right?" Often people are doing most things right, having done some research of their own, however I have realised that they really appreciate the ongoing support and being steered in the right direction from time to time when they go a little off track. I am thoroughly enjoying helping Rita's parents and it has been great watching her grow up. She has come on leaps and bounds since I first met her some 3 to 4 months back and I know she will continue to develop into a lovely well behaved dog. Keep up the good work
29th June 2014 - Graham Milgrew
Graham dealt with Pulling, Recall
Willoughby is an exceptionally well trained Cavalier King Charles Spaniel. When a dog has hearing loss it is not always obvious to an owner. It is very rare that a dog will have complete hearing loss (just like humans) and loss is often gradual so a dog will develop coping mechanisms to deal with it. An intelligent dog like Willoughby looks for visual cues and responds as though he can hear when he can't. In Willoughbys case he couldn't hear any high pitched noises and that included a normal dog whistle. He did react to very loud banging and could hear a loud low pitch police whistle his owner fortunately had, but not to clapping and floor stamping. Stamping often does work as a dog can feel vibration through floor boards, but his owners floors were concrete so vibration didn't carry. There are several methods for training deaf and hard of hearing dogs which we discussed. Willoughbys owner had already done a great job of teaching hand targeting (teaching a dog to touch your hand with his nose) so this could be adapted and used as a hand signal for recall. Normally you would call your dogs name and then use your hand to get your dog to come back to you and touch it. In this case the whistle was used instead of calling him vocally followed by the hand signal. Lead walking is more complex as Willoughby couldn't hear any vocal guidance so it was combination of using a 2 point harness to communicate physically with him and food to lure him to pay attention to his owner. Training a deaf or hard of hearing dog can be just as much fun and just as effective as training a hearing dog. A bonus is that very often a deaf dog is more attentive to its owner once an owner knows how to communicate with their dog.