Teri Rudolph Dog Training and Dog Walking Services

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Teri Rudolph Dog Training and Dog Walking Services Group and private lessons. Group lessons held at three different locations. Gentle and humane training. Fun and effective. Puppy classes starting at 9 weeks.
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Good Manners 1 start 19 weeks and up. Group classes focus on great house manners skills indoors and out, Good Manners 2 focuses on even better manners. Specialty classes offered outdoors to work on more real life situations outside of the classroom with more distraction. Positive reinforcement method of training used. Individual training offered as well that can be tailored to your dogs specific needs. Contact me today for more information!

07/05/2025

This morning alone, I talked to over eight potential clients with severe behavioral fallout from shock collars—often marketed more gently as “e-collars”.

Yes, I do work with clients who’ve used them, and booked several today who have, and I always strive to meet people where they’re at without judgement. But please—for the sake of your dog’s emotional well-being—stop using these tools.

Even the "vibrate" or "tone" settings can be deeply distressing. Dogs don’t understand these sensations—they just know the world sometimes can be scary and unpredictable. One dog I met pancaked to the floor at the sound of a door ding at the entrance and wouldn’t move. Another from last month now panics every time the ice maker goes off at home multiple times a day – fallout from the shock collar!

This isn't rare—it's the result of emotional trauma. Yes, this tool creates emotional learning and thus trauma for many dogs.

We now have overwhelming scientific evidence showing that aversive tools like shock collars cause lasting psychological harm and many dogs never fully recover.

Dogs learn through association, and when we pair fear or discomfort with training, it can leave deep emotional scars.

I will never stop advocating for us to do better by dogs. Dogs deserve kindness. They deserve humane, science-based training that builds trust, not fear.

Let’s do better—because they deserve better.

02/05/2025

News Release
“Schenectady Police Launches Free Pet Food Pantry Pop-Up Events with Mohawk Hudson Humane Society

The City of Schenectady, in partnership with the Mohawk Hudson Humane Society (MHHS), is proud to announce the launch of free Pet Food Pantry Pop-Up events for city residents in need through the Pets Are Family Too Assistance Program. This initiative, developed by Lieutenant Michael Dalton and ACO Elizabeth Booke of the Schenectady Police Department, is funded by a $20,000 grant awarded to the city in 2023 through the Better Cities for Pets™ program. Schenectady, through the leadership of Schenectady Mayor Gary McCarthy, is officially recognized as a Better City for Pets, highlighting its commitment to pet-friendly practices across businesses, parks, homes, and shelters.

As part of this effort, the Police Department’s Animal Control Unit will host pop-up pet food distribution events at various locations and times across the city. These events are free and open to all residents of the City of Schenectady who are in need.
For the first event, MHHS will provide free pet food and staff support on:

Tuesday, May 6, 2025
12 PM – 2 PM
Central Park Dog Park, 500 Iroquois Way

Future event dates and locations will be announced later. For more information, contact the Schenectady Police Department’s Animal Control Officers.

“This is about keeping families together — and for many, pets are family,” said Mayor Gary McCarthy. “We’re proud to launch a program that reflects that belief and helps our residents through tough times.” “

21/03/2025

The Slope of your dog's pasterns....

A dog’s pasterns correspond to our wrists, and as McDowell Lyon points out in The Dog in Action, a dog’s foot is made up of the same bones found in our fingers with the heel that section of the palm at finger union. Put another way, a dog walks with his fingers in front. Dogs are digitigrade animals which means that their digits — not their heels — take most of their weight when they walk. A dog’s toe bones are very important, as are the front pasterns, that space between the paw and the lower end of the radius bone closest to the paw.

The pastern’s slope, the angle seen in the image, is about 20 degrees in many breeds with well set back shoulders, BUT, pastern slope and length vary by breed. The slope and angle seen on a German Shepherd Dog is wholly incorrect in a Treeing Walker Coonhound for which “the pastern, from the joint to the top of the foot is strong and distinct, slightly slanting but standing almost perpendicular to the ground.” Consider, too, the English Foxhound in which “legs as straight as a post” were desired, with the result of straight pasterns. As an aside, the AKC breed standard adds, “The desire for straightness had a tendency to produce knuckling-over, which at one time was countenanced, but in recent years this defect has been eradicated by careful breeding and intelligent adjudication.”

Check the breed standard to determine what is appropriate. As a rule (a very general rule), some slope absorbs shock and prevents knuckling over. It also helps lift the dog’s center of gravity. A short pastern offers more efficiency by working at a better mechanical advantage and greater endurance, but when there is too much slope for the breed, it is referred to as being “down in the pasterns.” Weak pasterns will cause the dog to lay his pasterns on the ground like a human lays his forearms on a table, but in the dog’s case, it’s not done willingly, but often because of pain. A dog that’s down in the pasterns will tire faster, and enjoy playing less (let alone working).

Books on structure correctly say that weak pasterns are usually caused from injury or genetics; in puppies, however, pasterns can also go “wonky” during teething when cartilage in the pup’s body goes soft resulting in low pasterns. This is completely natural and usually resolves itself in several weeks. Rapid bone growth, especially common in large breed dogs, can also cause pasterns to let down. In all growing puppies, walking on slippery surfaces makes things worse by making the dog strain its muscles and joints, so a surface with good friction is helpful for them.

Some people believe that supplying a dog with vitamin C can boost help with joints and connective tissues, but as with any supplement, a veterinarian should be consulted first. Others believe that when muscles don’t function well, they become “demoted “by the brain, and using something like PawPods to helps strengthen the musculature by biasing the carpus into proper alignment. In essence, it’s similar to the way an arch support works in a human shoe.

The internet is filled with sources about how to improve weak or broken down pasterns, but to help with it, one must recognize it. Conversely, over-angulated pasterns are also problematic, and we’ll address that in another post.

06/03/2025

Oh my goodness 🤣

08/02/2025
29/12/2024

I see a lot of cases where dogs frequently dart out of the front door. Some of these dogs, encounter danger if they run loose. But many of the ones I see, are a danger to others when they run loose.

Teaching impulse control and boundaries at doorways is an absolute must. However, if you have a dog that is a danger to society AND has a history of bolting through the front door, I always recommend creating a double barrier at the front door. Training and behavior is never 100% fool proof. Dogs make mistakes. People make mistakes. And sometimes we cannot afford for any more mistakes to happen.

This recommendation is NOT a substitute for training. But, when added in as a compliment, if we make it a rule that the gate closes before you open the door and vice versa, we can get pretty close to a 100% fool proof guarantee that door dashing will never happen again. I always tell people that I’m a realist and that safety is top priority. So in these cases, the configurable gates are a crucial part of the plan.

02/12/2024

**AS OF 12/3/2024, THIS CLINIC IS NOW FULL.**

Our next vaccination clinic is this Saturday, December 7!

We will have limited sign-ups for cats and dogs for the following services:
💉 Free Distemper vaccines thanks to Petco Love
💉 $10 Rabies vaccines
💉 $20 microchipping

🐶 Make sure to sign up! If there are no appointments available, this clinic is full. 🐱 mohawkhumane.org/index.php/vaccination-clinic-11

25/11/2024

Happy Thanksgiving, y'all! 🧡 Please be responsible and feed your pet's their normal diet during the holiday season. No matter how cute and irresistible their begging might be. 😉

Address

NY

Telephone

(518) 209-2136

Website

http://www.operationatease.org/

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