Out Of The Bark

Out Of The Bark Behavior Consulting, Private Dog Training, Puppy Socialization, Puppy Classes, Group Classes, Control Unleashed Classes, East Bay Area

06/09/2026

One day Milo will be a senior dog.

Today, he’s healthy, strong, and full of energy. That’s exactly why we’re here.

These physical therapy exercises aren’t a necessity right now—they’re an investment in his future. By helping him become comfortable with the equipment, handling, and exercises while he’s feeling good, we can make the process much less stressful if he ever needs additional support later in life.

Too often we wait until our dogs are hurting before introducing things that could help them. I’d rather prepare Milo now, while he’s confident and thriving.

A huge thank you to .monaco.torelli for being such an important part of Milo’s journey. There was a time when vet visits meant a muzzle and heavy medication to help him cope. Through patience, thoughtful handling, and positive experiences, Laura helped Milo build the confidence he needed to feel safe and comfortable in this environment. Today, he can walk in relaxed, participate willingly, and continue building skills that will benefit him for years to come.

Growing old is a privilege. My job is to help him do it as comfortably as possible. ❤️🐾

06/05/2026

This doesn’t look like much.

One dog chasing water. Another patiently waiting his turn.

But both of these dogs once struggled with significant reactivity toward dogs and people. Moments like this weren’t always possible.

Now they’re sharing space, relaxing together, and enjoying life.

Behavior change isn’t always flashy. Sometimes the greatest success is when nothing happens at all. ❤️

06/03/2026

🎆 July 4th is coming… Is your dog ready?

The best time to prepare for fireworks isn’t July 3rd—it’s now.

We’ve put together our top tips to help your dog feel safer and more comfortable during fireworks season, including creating a safe space, practicing with fireworks sounds, updating ID tags, and talking with your veterinarian early.

Small steps in June can make a big difference in July. 🐾

💬 Comment FIREWORKS below and we’ll send you our free July 4th Survival Guide!

05/25/2026

You do not need a “perfect recall” to give your dog more freedom.

You need awareness.

Milo spends most of his walks on a 20ft leash, which has taught him an important skill: keep track of where your human is.

Notice the little moments:• I stop walking and he checks in• I back up and he adjusts with me• He chooses one direction, I choose another, and he quickly reconnects• Even when distracted by the environment, he keeps tabs on my movement

This is not obedience through pressure. It is relationship, awareness, and reinforcement history.

Because Milo has learned that staying connected to me matters, he naturally maintains proximity without constant commands. He understands that freedom comes through engagement, not disconnection.

A reliable dog is not always the one glued to your side. Sometimes it is the dog confidently exploring the world while still mentally staying with you.

05/21/2026

Who knew the hose could be such a big reinforcer! It’s incredible for Milo to be able to maintain a playful state even with the delivery man is approaching the front door! Thanks for the free training Fed Ex dude!

05/13/2026

Can’t stop, won’t stop 🛑

Milo will play all day, every day. Finding the things that truly bring you and your dog joy, then doing them together, should be the ultimate goal. It builds your relationship, strengthens trust, and teaches you how to live a little more like a dog… present and in the moment.

05/12/2026

This is Humane Functional Reinforcement Training. We identify what the dog wants, then shape the behaviors that gain access to it.

In this example, access to the facility is the reinforcer. The dog wants to move forward and enter the building. Pulling tightens the leash and pauses access. Returning to a loose leash and orienting back to the handler makes movement begin again.

The goal is not to suppress the dog’s desire to get to the facility. The goal is to teach the dog how to access it successfully.

Access shapes behavior.

05/07/2026

Not every “successful pass” is actually helping the dog learn.

In this clip, Sierra passes another dog safely, but she is still over threshold enough to growl and lunge during the interaction. While we kept everyone safe through management, repeatedly practicing this exact picture can actually strengthen the unwanted behavior over time.

Why? Because behavior that gets rehearsed gets stronger.

If every walk looks like tight spaces, high arousal, and reactive explosions, the dog begins building a larger history of reacting in those environments. That is why distance matters so much in behavior work.

Distance is not avoidance. Distance is information. It lowers arousal enough for the dog to stay connected, maintain a loose leash, and actually access reinforcement. That is where food, toys, praise, movement, and learning become possible.

When Sierra has enough space to stay under threshold, we can begin changing the emotional association instead of simply surviving the moment. Over time, those better associations allow us to gradually reduce distance until the dog can comfortably pass another dog in a tighter space while maintaining a loose leash and offering orientation back to the handler instead of reacting.

Sometimes progress looks less like “pushing through” and more like creating conditions where the dog can actually succeed.

05/05/2026

Dog 2 is where it clicks.
Food isn’t the focus anymore—it’s just information.
We’re building dogs who listen without needing to see the reward.
Food clipped away, out of sight… and still choosing calm, polite greetings

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2960 Pacific Avenue
Dublin, CA
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