Precision Animal Training

On The Road With The Chicken Workshop Roadshow

19 min · 19 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio On The Road With The Chicken Workshop Roadshow

Descripción

In this episode of Precision Animal Training, Kirsten Kraljevic and Dr. Bob Bailey dive into the wild logistics and rich history behind taking chicken training workshops on the road across North America. Dr. Bob Bailey shares stories of hauling 42 chickens, tons of feed, and custom-built equipment from coast to coast. He navigated complex state and international animal inspection rules while keeping high welfare standards for the birds, often going well beyond what the industry required. The episode is packed with inventive solutions for life on the road, like building odor filters for hotel stays and shoveling 200 pounds of ice into the trailer to keep the chickens cool during desert crossings. It highlights the dedication, creativity, and grit it took to bring hands-on animal training directly to the public and shows why these workshops still matter today. 3 Key Takeaways 1. Logistical Challenges of Traveling Animal Workshops   Transporting chickens across the U.S. and Canada demanded serious planning, health inspections, and the right paperwork to meet state and federal agriculture regulations. The process was extra complicated because of poultry's high value and strict disease-control measures. 2. Innovative Solutions for Animal Welfare on the Road   Keeping the chickens comfortable on long hauls required plenty of creative thinking. Dr. Bob Bailey built portable cages with odor-filtering systems and found ways to protect them in extreme conditions, including loading hundreds of pounds of ice to cool the trailer through desert stretches. 3. Dedication to High Standards of Care   Unlike commercial poultry operations, these workshop chickens lived much longer lives, often reaching 8 to 10 years. Dr. Bob Bailey and Kirsten Kraljevic stress the daily commitment it took to maintain their health and comfort, with most of that behind-the-scenes work kept quietly out of the public eye. Quick Training Lessons From The Episode Here are the key takeaways Kirsten wants listeners to carry with them: 1. Preparation and adaptability are everything. Traveling with animals calls for solid planning plus plenty of on-the-spot problem solving, whether you're handling paperwork or figuring out how to keep chickens happy on the road. 2. Attention to detail in animal care sets you apart. Going above and beyond industry standards, even in tough situations, shows real commitment to the animals' long-term well-being. 3. Behind-the-scenes work matters. The smooth workshops and presentations you see depend on countless unseen hours of cleaning, feeding, and protecting the animals. 4. Resilience is vital. Whether facing bureaucracy, extreme weather, or surprise problems, determination and persistence turn obstacles into great adventures. 5. The knowledge and legacy are worth preserving. Keeping these stories and techniques alive is crucial for the future of animal training and education.

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13 episodios

episode From Chickens to Canines: Simon Prins on Modernizing Animal Training with Technology artwork

From Chickens to Canines: Simon Prins on Modernizing Animal Training with Technology

In this episode, Kirsten Kraljevic and Dr. Bob Bailey sit down with Simon Prins [https://www.simonprins.com/], a pioneering animal trainer from the Netherlands. Simon shares his remarkable journey, from his first encounters with Bob Bailey to the challenges of introducing science-based training methods in Europe. He explains the shift from traditional approaches to more efficient, data-driven techniques that are transforming the field. Key topics include the importance of terminal maneuvers, the innovative use of laser guidance in training, and the value of sharing best practices across organizations. Simon highlights persistence, belief, and continuous learning as he reflects on the gradual but steady evolution of animal training technology. He makes a strong case for transparency, collaboration, and hands-on experience to raise industry standards, while offering practical insights on overcoming resistance to change and spreading evidence-based knowledge worldwide. Check Out Simon's Blog [https://detectiondogshop.com/] Key Listener Takeaways 1. The Power of Openness and Collaboration Sharing knowledge and breaking down barriers between police, military, and private security organizations is essential for advancing animal training. Simon stresses that real progress happens when trainers openly discuss mistakes, exchange ideas, and learn from one another. 2. Continuous Change and Self-Improvement The best trainers are those willing to persist through challenges while staying open to changing their own behaviors and beliefs. Simon describes his own years-long journey away from traditional punitive methods toward positive reinforcement, underscoring the need for ongoing curiosity and adaptability. 3. Hands-On Experience Trumps Theory Alone True expertise requires translating knowledge into mechanical skill through real interaction with animals. Simon points out that while theory matters, nothing replaces practical work, such as training chickens, to develop effective methods. Quick Training Lessons from the Episode Here are the key takeaways that Simon Prins and the hosts want you to carry forward: 1. Real progress comes from stepping outside your comfort zone and being willing to change your own behavior, even when it's uncomfortable.   2. Openly sharing knowledge and experiences across police, security, and private trainers is critical for improving the entire field and delivering better outcomes.   3. Efficient training blends the best of theory with hands-on practice, turning ideas into reliable mechanical skills with animals.   4. Quality control and honest self-assessment are vital. Don't hide mistakes; learn from them and help others avoid repeating them.   5. Perseverance matters. Spreading new ideas and overcoming resistance takes time and belief, but it makes a lasting difference.   6. Stay curious and keep learning. If you're not willing to adapt and grow, you're holding yourself and the industry back.   7. The most powerful lessons in animal training, and in life, often come from simple tools, persistent experimentation, and the willingness to fail and try again. This episode is packed with wisdom for anyone serious about modern, ethical, and effective animal training. Simon's perspective reminds us that the path forward is built on collaboration, humility, and relentless curiosity.

18 de jun de 202641 min
episode Keeping It Simple in Animal Training: Critical Thinking and Mechanical Skills artwork

Keeping It Simple in Animal Training: Critical Thinking and Mechanical Skills

In this episode of Precision Animal Training, Kirsten and Dr. Bob Bailey reflect on their recent workshops with trainers from around the world. They highlight the importance of challenge and rigor in quality animal training education. The discussion explores the pitfalls of oversimplification, the rise of “knockoff” workshops, and why effective programs must push participants to build genuine mechanical and observational skills. Drawing from decades of teaching experience, Dr. Bailey shares memorable stories, including missteps and humorous moments, while stressing that training principles should be kept simple but never easy. He cautions against unnecessary complexity and emphasizes the need for critical thinking, scientific foundations, and well-designed hands-on exercises. Ultimately, the episode serves as a call for aspiring trainers to prioritize skill mastery, evidence-based practice, and the power of simplicity. 3 Key Takeaways 1. The Value of Challenge in Training Workshops Challenging workshops are a hallmark of quality animal training. If a workshop feels too easy or participants succeed without effort, important skill development is likely missing. Real growth comes from facing difficulties, stretching abilities, and sometimes falling short. These moments reveal exactly where improvement is needed. 2. Simplicity Over Complexity Making training concepts sound complex does not make them better. Effective training rests on clear, foundational principles. While the principles themselves are simple, mastering them requires focused effort and strong mechanical skills. Simple never means easy. 3. Critical Thinking as a Professional Asset Strong critical thinking helps trainers separate meaningful methods from flashy marketing and unnecessary jargon. Seek out scientifically sound, clearly presented content and avoid “fluff” that adds little real value. Quick Training Lessons From The Episode Here are the key takeaways Kirsten wants listeners to carry with them: 1. If a workshop feels too easy, it probably isn’t worth your time. True learning comes from real challenges and honest struggle.    2. Simplicity is powerful. Keeping training methods simple is the secret to mastery, even though simple does not mean easy.   3. Skilled animal training depends on mechanical skills, timing, criteria, and rate of reinforcement. These abilities cannot be learned from reading alone. They require real, hands-on experience.   4. Don’t be fooled by complicated language or fluff. Choose workshops and trainers that communicate clearly, use evidence-based principles, and challenge you meaningfully.   5. Mistakes are where progress happens. Spilling feed, missing cues, and moments of difficulty are essential stepping stones to real skill.   6. A strong future in animal training starts with a willingness to work on yourself, keep good records, and embrace practices built on decades of experience and proven results.

8 de jun de 202625 min
episode Transforming Animal Training: Fact, Woo Woo, and Science in Practice artwork

Transforming Animal Training: Fact, Woo Woo, and Science in Practice

In this episode of Precision Animal Training, Kirsten Kraljevic and Dr. Bob Bailey explore the evolution and global impact of modern animal training. They discuss the Baileys’ and Brelands’ pioneering workshops, the challenges of traveling with chickens, and Marian’s health struggles, which eventually led to Dr. Bob Bailey taking the lead at Animal Behavior Enterprises.  The legacy of their methods spread worldwide as students brought the knowledge back to their home countries. After Marian’s passing, invitations for Dr. Bob to teach internationally grew, expanding the reach of their work even further. The conversation highlights the universality of behavioral principles across species, shares the story behind innovations like the “keep going” signal, and touches on the human side of things - resilience, mentorship, and adaptation - that have shaped animal training’s effectiveness and global influence. Kirsten and Dr. Bob also reflect on the importance of maintaining scientific rigor while staying open to curiosity and new ideas. 3 Key Takeaways 1. The Spread of Animal Training Methods Worldwide   Dr. Bob Bailey explained that the global expansion of their techniques came largely from students who attended workshops in the US and then took the methods back to their own countries. International teaching invitations increased after Marian’s passing, helping spread the methodology even wider. 2. Scientific Integrity vs. "Woo Woo" Science   Kirsten Kraljevic and Dr. Bob Bailey stressed the importance of scientific rigor in animal training. Dr. Bob cautioned against teaching unproven or speculative “woo woo” ideas, emphasizing that only what can be observed and measured should be presented to students. 3. Innovation in Animal Training: The "Keep Going" Signal   The episode covers the development and power of the “keep going” signal - a tool for maintaining desirable behavior at a distance over time. Dr. Bob described experiments showing how continuous signals (like a whistle or click) could keep animals engaged in tasks, revolutionizing long-distance training in open environments. Quick Training Lessons From The Episode Here are the key takeaways Kirsten wants listeners to carry with them: 1. The principles of animal training are universal - they work across species and situations. Commit to the process, not just the individual animal. 2. Real innovation comes from careful observation, measurement, and adaptation. If you can’t observe it, you can’t improve it. 3. The “keep going” signal and bridging techniques can dramatically boost how quickly and confidently animals learn, especially over distance and in difficult environments. 4. The global reach of these ideas comes from dedicated students who take them home and apply them in their own communities. 5. These principles have proven their value across many settings - from zoos to working dog teams - showing their versatility and relevance. 6. History provides a strong foundation, but the future of animal training depends on critical thinking, openness to new information, and the willingness to let go of ideas that don’t hold up. Embrace knowledge, but release the “woo woo.” 7. Supporting and protecting students matters just as much as the material itself. There’s real responsibility that comes with sharing powerful - and sometimes controversial - information.

26 de may de 202635 min
episode On The Road With The Chicken Workshop Roadshow artwork

On The Road With The Chicken Workshop Roadshow

In this episode of Precision Animal Training, Kirsten Kraljevic and Dr. Bob Bailey dive into the wild logistics and rich history behind taking chicken training workshops on the road across North America. Dr. Bob Bailey shares stories of hauling 42 chickens, tons of feed, and custom-built equipment from coast to coast. He navigated complex state and international animal inspection rules while keeping high welfare standards for the birds, often going well beyond what the industry required. The episode is packed with inventive solutions for life on the road, like building odor filters for hotel stays and shoveling 200 pounds of ice into the trailer to keep the chickens cool during desert crossings. It highlights the dedication, creativity, and grit it took to bring hands-on animal training directly to the public and shows why these workshops still matter today. 3 Key Takeaways 1. Logistical Challenges of Traveling Animal Workshops   Transporting chickens across the U.S. and Canada demanded serious planning, health inspections, and the right paperwork to meet state and federal agriculture regulations. The process was extra complicated because of poultry's high value and strict disease-control measures. 2. Innovative Solutions for Animal Welfare on the Road   Keeping the chickens comfortable on long hauls required plenty of creative thinking. Dr. Bob Bailey built portable cages with odor-filtering systems and found ways to protect them in extreme conditions, including loading hundreds of pounds of ice to cool the trailer through desert stretches. 3. Dedication to High Standards of Care   Unlike commercial poultry operations, these workshop chickens lived much longer lives, often reaching 8 to 10 years. Dr. Bob Bailey and Kirsten Kraljevic stress the daily commitment it took to maintain their health and comfort, with most of that behind-the-scenes work kept quietly out of the public eye. Quick Training Lessons From The Episode Here are the key takeaways Kirsten wants listeners to carry with them: 1. Preparation and adaptability are everything. Traveling with animals calls for solid planning plus plenty of on-the-spot problem solving, whether you're handling paperwork or figuring out how to keep chickens happy on the road. 2. Attention to detail in animal care sets you apart. Going above and beyond industry standards, even in tough situations, shows real commitment to the animals' long-term well-being. 3. Behind-the-scenes work matters. The smooth workshops and presentations you see depend on countless unseen hours of cleaning, feeding, and protecting the animals. 4. Resilience is vital. Whether facing bureaucracy, extreme weather, or surprise problems, determination and persistence turn obstacles into great adventures. 5. The knowledge and legacy are worth preserving. Keeping these stories and techniques alive is crucial for the future of animal training and education.

19 de may de 202619 min
episode How Bob and Marian Bailey Built The Chicken Workshops artwork

How Bob and Marian Bailey Built The Chicken Workshops

In this episode, Kirsten Kraljevic and Dr. Bob Bailey dive into the origins and evolution of their renowned chicken training workshops. Kirsten highlights the foundational role of observation and behavioral change in animal training, and she explains the workshops’ lasting impact on trainers across the industry. Dr. Bob Bailey shares how he and Marian developed these workshops, how they selected dedicated students, and how they refined their methods over time. He mentions influential trainers who attended, talks about the balance between real skill-building and industry hype, and recalls Marian’s incredible memory and drive. The episode shows the challenge of squeezing decades of experience into hands-on, immersive sessions and encourages listeners from any background to embrace behavioral change. At its heart, it’s a call to action for anyone who wants to grow through doing, observing, and changing behavior. 3 Key Takeaways 1. The Universal Relevance of Behavior Change  Kirsten Kraljevic emphasizes that anyone interested in changing behavior, whether in animals or in themselves, is the intended audience. The lessons and techniques apply broadly, so the content is relevant to more than just professional animal trainers. 2. The Value of Hands-On Experience in Animal Training  Both Kirsten and Dr. Bob Bailey stress that real understanding comes from immersive, practical experiences rather than just theory. The workshops are built around this kind of deep, experiential learning because no written description can replace actually doing it. 3. The Importance of Adaptability and Observation   Dr. Bob Bailey explains that the most successful students are those willing to adapt, observe closely, and change their own behavior. The program selects people who are eager to embrace these principles, since rigid or overly confident approaches don’t lead to genuine progress. Quick Training Lessons From The Episode Here are the wrap-up lessons that Kirsten wanted listeners to remember from this episode: - If you have ever wanted to change your own behavior, you are the audience. These experiences are for doers who want to try something new and gain fresh perspective.   - The business of animal training, and these workshops, is really about the power of changing behavior for anyone willing to take action.    - The greats in animal training put in the work. They didn’t just sell the sizzle, they committed to the craft and spent their ten thousand hours.   - Experience matters. No written account will ever replace actively participating in and observing real training. This is something you must do, not just read about.   - Grit and resilience are key. Like Marian, who earned her PhD later in life and overcame obstacles, you can pursue what matters at any stage.    - True growth comes from being willing to adapt, observe, and change, not just from attending but from embracing and applying the lessons.

7 de may de 202625 min