Melissa's Muttz 'n' Mongrels, LLC

Melissa's Muttz 'n' Mongrels, LLC Melissa's Muttz 'n' Mongrels obedience training creates stable, well- balanced dogs and happy owners! ABC certified dog trainer.

04/25/2025

If you are going to have a dog, you are going to have to make sacrifices. You cannot expect to have an animal that was designed to live primarily outside and bring it into your house and not have to make changes or adjustments. A dog is not an ornament, a commodity or a display. A dog is an animal. You are sharing your life with another species. This is life with a dog.

Your yard will not be pristine. The grass will get burned from their p*e. Holes will be dug, bushes shredded, mud will come in the house. You cannot ask them to not p*e in your house and then also try to control even their outside bathroom. Please see how unfair this is. This is life with a dog.

You house will need management. Your counters will need to be clear. Shoes will need to be put away. Laundry room blocked. Kids toys picked up. Some things will get destroyed anyway. This is life with a dog.

They will bark at noises. They will protect their territory. Sometimes fiercely. They will not welcome strange people into the home easily even if you “know them” because this is in their genetic DNA. They don’t understand family gatherings and they don’t always see things the way we do. They won’t love playing with every dog they meet. This is life with a dog.

They will need enrichment and work and productivity. They will need training that is kind and fair and consistent and then maintenance to maintain that training. They will need guidance and coaching and lots of reinforcement to help them perform unnatural behaviors against their natural phenotypes. This is life with a dog.

They will mature and change and modify in their likes, behaviors and preferences as they age. Their behaviors aren’t guaranteed. They are not robots and they can be mercurial as they grow into their own personalities. They are allowed to change their mind and shift naturally just as we do. They need to be seen for what and who they are, not what and who YOU want. This is life with a dog.

Life with a dog is not a human right. It is a privilege and a responsibility and an education. They are animals and should be treated and expected to behave as such. That doesn’t make them any less loved or family members and it doesn’t make them any less deserving of respect, in fact it makes them more so.

Enjoy your life with a dog, and help them enjoy life with a human.

- Helen St. Pierre

Happy Easter from the Muttz family!
04/20/2025

Happy Easter from the Muttz family!

Easter dogs

Oops!
03/11/2025

Oops!

Credit
"off the mark" comic by Mark Parisi

03/07/2025

🐾 THE MUDDY PAW METER IS BACK! 🐾

Saturday will be A LOT colder but there will still be lingering mud from days prior.

Things should be pretty frozen around here by Sunday. 🥶

Temperatures will start to thaw on Monday afternoon. 🎢

Widespread rain will arrive by Tuesday afternoon! 🌧️

02/13/2025

This guy is great. It's like learning dog training from someone in Sn**ch. Language notwithstanding, he talks a lot of sense.

02/12/2025

Very true!

01/06/2025
12/30/2024
12/30/2024

gratitude

12/04/2024
If you've had a lesson or a class with me recently, you know I'm ALL ABOUT the hand feeding!
12/01/2024

If you've had a lesson or a class with me recently, you know I'm ALL ABOUT the hand feeding!

I jumped into an interesting conversation about the rule of 3 in rescue, and whether it causes people to tolerate bad be...
11/18/2024

I jumped into an interesting conversation about the rule of 3 in rescue, and whether it causes people to tolerate bad behavior longer under the assumption that the dog is still "settling in" and the behavior will change. (Hint: it won't unless you do something about it).
So I fixed it to make it clearer:

I do use this rule, but differently. And it's a trainer's perspective, not the general public. Obviously the dog needs 3 days to orient to its new surroundings. I do the same when I go to a new city, vacation or whatever, I find my way around. At 3 weeks, the dog is comfortable enough around you to show you its true colors, for better or for worse. And ideally, at 3 months, you've put in the training/ boundaries/ structure/ management to understand the dog you're going to get, notwithstanding more training to proof, polish or adjust. In other words, you know its personality, what you can change and what you probably can't, which is usually about their individual genetics.

Address

1508 Bowman Avenue
Dayton, OH
45409

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