PRICING
Behavior Consultation
Includes thorough behavioral history, introduction to interpreting body language, assessment of your pet’s current behavior, discussion of goals, setting expectations for improvement, supporting documents, a behavior modification plan and 3 months of troubleshooting/plan adjustment.
Dogs: $225 lasts app. 1.5 hours
Cats: $150 lasts app. 1 hour
Zoom consultations: $150/hour prorated
Other Pets: Contact me for a quote
If you choose to purchase a training package, we will discuss which is the best fit for you and your dog during your behavior consultation.
30 minutes X 3: $150
30 minutes X 6: $300
45 minutes X 3: $225
45 minutes X 6: $450
60 minutes X 3: $300
60 minutes X 6: $600
Does your pet have a behavioral diagnosis and treatment plan from a veterinarian? If so, we can do a training package without the initial consultation.
Tutoring
I work with your dog directly until she has a base understanding of the desired behaviors. We then work together to transfer those skills. This is good for people who are too busy to do the bulk of the training, do not enjoy training or for dogs who need precise timing and/or professional handling. For example: if you are afraid to walk your dog because you have sustained injuries, day training is the place to start.
Coaching
We work together throughout the training. After I demonstrate, you do the bulk of the behavior modification while I coach. This is good for people who can make the time to train and want to do homework to advance faster.
LINGO
Cooperation in Care
Teaching your pet to participate in behaviors that help us help them. Veterinary, grooming and husbandry behaviors are all included.
For Fun Veterinary Visit
A trip to the vet that is all about making your pet feel comfortable in the space. No veterinary care is performed.
Victory Veterinary Visit
A training trip to your veterinary hospital where some minor care may be performed or a mock exam completed.
Aggression
Readiness to confront or attack. A threat toward another animal or person.
Reactivity
This could also be called "over reactive". What we perceive as minor stimuli triggers an exaggerated display by the animal.
Fear
Physiological response to a known or understood threat.
Example: Imagine your physical response if someone jumped out of a dark alley and grabbed you.
Anxiety
Physiological response to an unknown/undefined treat.
Example: Imagine your physical response if you were alone on a dark street passing an alley where someone could jump out and grab you.