Just a Dog Podcast

The invisible extreme | Why the border collie is an extreme breed too | Ellen Greenwood-Sole | The Urban Herder

52 min · Gestern
Episode The invisible extreme | Why the border collie is an extreme breed too | Ellen Greenwood-Sole | The Urban Herder Cover

Beschreibung

A border collie can track a sheep across a field from the smallest flick of movement. Drop that same dog on a busy street, and the skill that makes them brilliant is the one that comes undone. Ellen Greenwood-Sole, founder of The Urban Herder, has spent more than 10 years working with collies and the people who love them. She makes a case most of us miss. A collie's intensity is not a personality; it is an extreme we bred on purpose, the behavioural version of a flat face. We just call it clever and leave it at that. We get into why so much reactivity is really pain, why teaching a dog to switch off matters more than another walk, and why the kindest move is sometimes grieving the dog you pictured so you can meet the one you have.

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30 Folgen

Episode The invisible extreme | Why the border collie is an extreme breed too | Ellen Greenwood-Sole | The Urban Herder Cover

The invisible extreme | Why the border collie is an extreme breed too | Ellen Greenwood-Sole | The Urban Herder

A border collie can track a sheep across a field from the smallest flick of movement. Drop that same dog on a busy street, and the skill that makes them brilliant is the one that comes undone. Ellen Greenwood-Sole, founder of The Urban Herder, has spent more than 10 years working with collies and the people who love them. She makes a case most of us miss. A collie's intensity is not a personality; it is an extreme we bred on purpose, the behavioural version of a flat face. We just call it clever and leave it at that. We get into why so much reactivity is really pain, why teaching a dog to switch off matters more than another walk, and why the kindest move is sometimes grieving the dog you pictured so you can meet the one you have.

Gestern52 min
Episode Aggression is communication | What your dog's growl is saying | Michael Shikashio | AggressiveDog.com Cover

Aggression is communication | What your dog's growl is saying | Michael Shikashio | AggressiveDog.com

A growl is one of the clearest things a dog can tell us, and it's often the most misread. Dog aggression specialist Michael Shikashio has spent 25 years working with dogs that other trainers couldn't help. His view is that aggression isn't a fault to correct. It's communication. It's a dog showing us that something is wrong. This conversation looks at where our beliefs about dog behaviour come from, and how often they come from people who were confident rather than informed. Michael explains why he believes you can't train aggression out of a dog, why pain is one of the most missed reasons behind it, and how the dominance and alpha ideas spread despite the evidence. Michael is the founder of AggressiveDog.com and a five-term president of the International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants.

25. Mai 20261 h 4 min
Episode Why dogs react | Stress, trauma, and the canine brain | Daniel Shaw | Forensic Dog Behaviourist Cover

Why dogs react | Stress, trauma, and the canine brain | Daniel Shaw | Forensic Dog Behaviourist

When a dog reacts on the lead or struggles to settle at home, what we see is often the end of a biological process that started much earlier in the day. Daniel Shaw is a dog behaviourist with a master's in neuroscience. In this conversation, he explains what is happening in a dog's brain and body during a reaction, including how cortisol rises with each stressor, how the amygdala grows more sensitive under chronic stress, and the physical changes that trauma causes in the brain. Daniel also works as an expert witness in UK courts in serious dog-aggression cases, where his assessment can determine whether a dog goes home or is put to sleep. The conversation moves through the stress bucket, why secure fields can sometimes be better than a half-hour walk, why reading body language is a skill that takes time to develop, and the holes in the Dangerous Dogs Act that affect everyday guardians. Daniel runs a behaviour consultancy in Kent, founded the Brain and Behaviour Academy for dog professionals, hosts an annual UK conference, and gives evidence in courts deciding the fate of dogs across the country. Connect with Daniel Shaw ⁠Website⁠ [https://dogbehaviourspecialist.co.uk/] | ⁠LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/daniel-shaw-41308b161/]⁠ | ⁠Instagram⁠ [https://www.instagram.com/brainandbehaviouracademy/] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/6CbScDkz0sBfUGUOa3F6rF?si=14b7f4c348b14eb4]

11. Mai 20261 h 8 min
Episode Behaviour is information | Why what we read as 'bad' behaviour is usually a dog in pain | Dr Lisa Radosta DVM, DACVB Cover

Behaviour is information | Why what we read as 'bad' behaviour is usually a dog in pain | Dr Lisa Radosta DVM, DACVB

In this episode, we look at why dogs behave in ways that confuse or worry us. Dr. Lisa explains how pain, fear, and the way we treat dogs at home can show up as behaviour we'd otherwise call "bad". It's a conversation that asks you to look again at what your dog might be trying to tell you. Dr. Lisa Radosta is a board-certified veterinary behaviourist based in Florida. She's one of a small number of specialists worldwide trained both as a vet and as a behaviourist. With over 25 years of clinical experience, she's also the current president of the American College of Veterinary Behaviorists. If you have a dog who's anxious, reactive, or hard to live with, this conversation will give you a different way to look at what's going on. Dr. Radosta also breaks down when to call a trainer versus a behaviourist, and why it matters. And if you just want to understand your dog better, you'll come away with plenty to think about. Connect with Dr. Lisa Radosta Website [https://drlisaradosta.com/] | LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/lisa-radosta-dvm-dacvb-a88b625/] | Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/drlisaradosta/] | Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/drlisaradosta/] | YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@drlisaradosta]

27. Apr. 20261 h 0 min
Episode Cashmere from dogs | Turning discarded dog undercoat into luxury yarn | Sebastian Salvat, Chiora Cover

Cashmere from dogs | Turning discarded dog undercoat into luxury yarn | Sebastian Salvat, Chiora

Every spring, a double-coated dog sheds enough undercoat to knit a jumper. Most of it goes in the bin, or worse, on the garden fence for the birds, where flea treatment residue can kill hatchlings. Sebastian Salvat wants a better option. Sebastian is a fashion marketing student at London College of Fashion and the founder of Chiora, a project turning brushed-out dog undercoat into a cashmere-like yarn. He's been working in dog rescue since he was sixteen, lives with two rescues from Romania (Chai and Ora, who the brand is named after), and is backed by LCF's startup programme. The British Dog Wool Association was doing something similar for soldiers in hospitals over a hundred years ago. So the idea isn't new. The question is whether it should exist now. We get into the ethics of building a luxury material from a living animal, the economics that keep the model honest, and what Sebastian is doing differently this time around. If you live with a double-coated dog, pause before you throw the brush-outs away. Send your dog's brushed-out undercoat to Chiora info@chiora.org [info@chiora.org] | chiora.org

22. Apr. 202647 min