Ain't Misbehavin' Canine Academy

Ain't Misbehavin' Canine Academy The dogs have the facts, and the humans have the opinions." --J. Allen Boone

“Training dogs and helping people is more than my profession, it is my passion” Michelle LaMarca Knapp , CPDT-KA– Owner/Head Trainer Certified Dog Trainers
Private Training in Your Home
All Breeds; All Ages
Specializing in:
~Obedience~
~Manners~
~Puppy Training ~
housebreaking, pla

y biting, jumping
~Behavior Problems~
wild behavior, separation anxiety, etc. Veterinarian Recommended
Effective Results Oriented Dog Training
Certified Trainers
AKC Canine Good Citizen Evaluator

Serving Nassau and Western Suffolk Long Island, NY

614-546-9915

www.AintMisbehavinCanineAcademy.com

“A CANINE ACADEMY FOR ALL
YOUR TRAINING NEEDS!”

CALL US, WE ARE HAPPY TO DISCUSS YOUR CONCERNS BY PHONE

"There's facts about dogs, and there's opinions about them.

06/17/2024
Happy Father’s Day to all wonderful dads.
06/16/2024

Happy Father’s Day to all wonderful dads.

Excellent article about titles   https://healthydogworkshop.com/the-trouble-with-titers/Sent from my iPhone
06/12/2024

Excellent article about titles
https://healthydogworkshop.com/the-trouble-with-titers/

Sent from my iPhone

Titer has become a very important and often controversial term in today’s veterinary world. No laboratory test in my memory has been more misunderstood, misinterpreted, misused, and downright maligned by owners and veterinarians alike. The most extreme example is the rabies vaccination. While this...

Remembering all who served ❤️
05/27/2024

Remembering all who served ❤️

05/27/2024

Dante wishes you a safe and happy Memorial Day

Sweet Portuguese Water Dog Oscar prepares to go home after spending a long weekend with us. He’s in for a big surprise! ...
05/14/2024

Sweet Portuguese Water Dog Oscar prepares to go home after spending a long weekend with us. He’s in for a big surprise! Congratulations to the new parents of a precious baby girl. (You know who you are)!!

https://aintmisbehavindogtraining.com/

















If dogs had a theme song Lexi’s would be ‘Girls just want to have fun’!  This sweet bundle of energy lives with 2 other ...
05/13/2024

If dogs had a theme song Lexi’s would be ‘Girls just want to have fun’! This sweet bundle of energy lives with 2 other Goldens and likes nothing more than to play, play, play! Though we worked on basic commands a lot of time was spent working on calming exercises around the other dogs. Her owners are great people who love this breed. Their commitment to stick with the training will make a world of difference. Good luck!

https://aintmisbehavindogtraining.com/

















Handsome Kano is such a sweet boy. He’s  a fast learner and easily applies what he learns inside his home to the streets...
04/24/2024

Handsome Kano is such a sweet boy. He’s a fast learner and easily applies what he learns inside his home to the streets. I’m told he’s leash reactive though I haven’t seen it yet. That’s not because he’s well behaved when he sees another dog but because we just don’t see any dogs when we work. It’s a challenge finding dogs outside in quiet suburban neighborhoods. Hopefully we’ll get to schedule our next lesson away from home at an area where I think we’ll see plenty of dogs and has more than enough room to work from a safe distance if necessary. https://aintmisbehavindogtraining.com/

















If you want to be able to walk your dogs in NYS parks and beaches, PLEASE take a minute to make a few phone calls. Last ...
04/23/2024

If you want to be able to walk your dogs in NYS parks and beaches, PLEASE take a minute to make a few phone calls. Last year when Senator Martinez and Assemblyman Stern introduced these bills (and the local press wrote about them) they said they heard from plenty of people who DIDN’T want dogs in parks and beaches, but they only got a few calls from supporters of the bill.
Keep in mind this is not proposing to allow dogs at Jones Beach field 4 on the 4th of July; the idea is for reasonable access i.e. off season, off hours, beaches not suitable for people, etc. Also while some state parks do allow dogs, others (for example Valley Stream) do not. So please make a few calls (there is even a script if you need suggestions on what to say) and feel free to share this with other dog owners. Thanks

Wishing you a happy and blessed Passover.
04/22/2024

Wishing you a happy and blessed Passover.

There’s some good info here but do your own research and decide for yourself -
04/22/2024

There’s some good info here but do your own research and decide for yourself -

THE RIMADYL MARKETING GAME

The advertising robots of Facebook have suggested I might be interested in Rimadyl at $35.24 for 30 25mg caplets.

Not so much.

First, what is Rimadyl?

Rimadyl is a non steroidal anti inflammatory drug (NSAID) called Carprofen.

Car-profen. Look at that name closely. It it reminds you of the name of another drug -- Ibu-profen -- that is not an accident.

In fact, Ibuprofen (aka Motrin, Advil, Nuprin) is also a non steroidal anti inflammatory (NSAID), and Ibuprofen and Carprofen are chemically very similar. One is is Cox-1 drug (Ibuprofen), and the other is a Cox-2 drug (Rimadyl).

What's the difference between a Cox-1 and a Cox-2 drug? In the real world, not a damn thing unless you are taking the drug daily and for a very long period of time (i.e., more than 3 weeks of daily dosing).

Cox-2 drugs, such as Rimadyl, have NOT been shown to be more effective at alleviating pain than Cox-1 drugs such as Aspirin and Ibuprofen.

So, to put a point on it, almost all Rimadyl sales by veterinarians for short-term use are a rip-off; you could be using buffered children's Apirin or a low-dosage of Ibuprofen for a lot less money.

At the core of the scam you have drug company that has created a "me too" version of Ibuprofen that they sell through veterinarians. Veterinarians sell the drug at a big profit (more than 100 percent markup) and also create client dependency as folks have to come back in those cases where a recurring condition (like limber tail) might arise. The drug company makes a lot money, the veterinarian makes a lot of money, and you, the customer, are out of money.

Some veterinarians trying to protect the profit-and-dependency business model will protest that dogs "do not process Ibuprofen as well as Rimadyl."

Which is barely true. All NSAIDs are a little bit hard on the stomach (including Rimadyl), and while Cox-2 drugs are a little bit easier on the stomach than Cox-1 drugs (like Ibuprofen or Aspirin) the differences are minimal, and are essentially zero for short-term use (i.e. anything less than three weeks).

Nor are Cox-2 drugs completely safe. Cox-2 drugs like Vioxx, Celebrex and Bextra have all been implicated in heart attacks and strokes in humans, and Vioxx was pulled after it was implicated in killing perhaps as many as 20,000 people. Bextra too has been pulled from the market, and Rimadyl, once sold to humans, is now only sold for veterinary use, under the theory that dogs do not typically suffer from hypertension.

Will your veterinarian tell you all this? Not likely! You see, there is too much money to be made selling Rimadyl.

There is, of course, another factor at work. I call this the "Witch Doctor's burden."

If you've taken a dog to the vet, no matter what the reason, you are going to billed for an office visit, which is only fair: time is time. Around here, that office visit alone is going to cost you about $80.

Now, if the vet glances at your dog's ass (a case of limber tail), shrugs her shoulders, and says "Ibuprofen might help," you are really going to wonder what you have paid your money for.

Yet, if this same vet looks carefully at the tail, scrunches up her face, and says "What we seem to have here is a rare condition, found only in certain working dog breeds, and only in very active dogs. This is a temporal, breed-specific, idiopathic, neuro-muscular condition, and not the kind most vets see every day. But I have good news: I know what it is, and I have a prescription for a medicine. The medicine is not cheap, but I am pretty sure it will work."

Well! After that kind of stem-winding (what's it all mean?), most patients are eager to write a check for another $50.00 ("is that all?"), and the vet is only too happy to oblige knowing that a dog with limber tail is likely to be in again for a prescription refill -- at which time perhaps a round of unnecessary vaccines, unnecessary blood work, and unnecessary teeth cleaning can be sold.

Now, if you simply "google" (this is now a verb) Ibuprofen and dogs, you will not find out what I have told you here unless you do a lot of reading and read very carefully. Instead, what you will find are a bunch of ninnies (some of who are vets trying to protect their price-gouging-and-dependency business plan), who say that short-term Ibuprofen use will rip up a dog's stomach and is even poisonous to dogs because it is so easy to overdose a dog.

Which is, of course, complete nonsense. Here are the facts:

▪️Ibuprofen will NOT damage your dog's stomach if given daily for any period under three weeks duration. In addition, Rimadyl may damage your dog's stomach if given for over three weeks duration. For long-term daily use (such as arthritis in an aged dog), Rimadyl may be better than Ibuprofen, but if money is a big issue, buffered children's aspirin is the way to go.

▪️ANY medicine is a poison if it is not given in the proper dosage. This is as true for Rimadyl and any Cox-2 drug as it is for Ibuprofen and any Cox-1 drug (such as Aspirin). In fact, the proper per-pound of dog dosage for Rimadyl is one-fourth to one-half that of Ibuprofen. Yes, yes, you have to give a smaller dose of Ibuprofen to a 20-pound dog than you do to 200-pound human, but that is true for ALL drugs!

To repeat: proper dosage is important for ALL medicines, and Ibuprofen is the same, in this regard, as everything else.

The proper dosage for Ibuprofen in a dog is 2 to 4 mg per pound of dog, every 12 hours.

For a 10-pound dog, that means 20 to 40 mg every 12 hours. For a 20-pound dog, that means 40 to 80 mg every 12 hours.

Do the math for your dog, based on weight, and buy chewable 50 mg Ibuprofen to make it simple. Split a tablet for a 10-pound dog, and give him the whole tablet if you have a 20-pound dog. Scale up the dosage, by weight, if your dog is larger. Start with lower-dosage; it will probably be enough.

If you prefer, you can go to your neighborhood pharmacy's children's health section, and get Ibuprofen for infants (it comes in a liquid with a syringe. A 50 mg dose is typically 1.25 ml (1 cc is the same as 1 ml, and there are 5 ml or 5 cc to a teaspoon), but read the packaging. The pharmacy will also have 100 mg tablets of Ibuprofen for young children, which can be split in half for a 20-pound dog (use a pill cutter).

You do not have to go with Ibuprofen. Another fine Cox-I drug is called Aspirin, and you can either buy buffered children's Aspirin at the local pharmacy, or you can pay a little more money and order "veterinary Aspirin" (Vetrin) , which is dosed at the rate of 8-12 mg per 1 lb. of dog body weight. Dose every 12 hours, as per Ibuprofen.

Finally, an end note: Never give any NSAID (not Rimadyl, not Ibuprofen, and not even Aspirin) to a cat. Cats and NSAIDs generally do not mix, even at low doses.

It was satisfying to watch fearful little Dill confront his fears and grow into a much more confident dog. It can be tou...
04/21/2024

It was satisfying to watch fearful little Dill confront his fears and grow into a much more confident dog. It can be tough on sensitive dogs to learn to navigate an environment that is so different from that of their past. Suburban living can be daunting and change is scary. I think Dill and his wonderful owners now have the tools for success. Best of luck Dill. ❤️ https://aintmisbehavindogtraining.com/

















https://linguaholic.com/linguablog/dog-idioms/This is worth a look even if you're not interested in dog idioms. The illu...
04/19/2024

https://linguaholic.com/linguablog/dog-idioms/
This is worth a look even if you're not interested in dog idioms. The illustrations are pretty amazing.

Dogs are not just our loyal companions; they also inspire a rich array of expressions in English.

Interesting study on effects of spay/neuter by breed.
04/13/2024

Interesting study on effects of spay/neuter by breed.

Spaying female and castrating male dogs, hereinafter referred to as neutering, is a US convention for the first year in the dog's life. Research on 35 breeds of dogs revealed that early neutering increases risks of joint disorders, such as hip dysplasia (HD), elbow dysplasia (ED), or cranial cruciat...

https://youtu.be/iA8Vqz4AK10?si=3gszeNDatjs-Bjz4A day in the life of Lassie. Awesome little film that thankfullyl has be...
03/30/2024

https://youtu.be/iA8Vqz4AK10?si=3gszeNDatjs-Bjz4
A day in the life of Lassie. Awesome little film that thankfullyl has been preserved. Rudd Weatherwax was a phenomenal dog trainer.

Dog trainer Rudd Weatherwax narrates A Day in the Life Of Lassie, featuring one of the dogs he trained to play Lassie in movies and on TV, a job held by the ...

Address

Columbus, OH

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 9pm
Tuesday 9am - 9pm
Wednesday 9am - 9pm
Thursday 9am - 9pm
Friday 9am - 9pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+16145469915

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Ain't Misbehavin' Canine Academy posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Ain't Misbehavin' Canine Academy:

Videos

Share

Category