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Pawprint Academy: Your Blueprint to Raising Better Dogs

Pawprint Academy: Your Blueprint to Raising Better Dogs

TOP Dog Training LLC

33 episodesEN

Show overview

Pawprint Academy: Your Blueprint to Raising Better Dogs launched in 2025 and has put out 33 episodes, alongside 1 trailer or bonus episode in the time since. That works out to roughly 35 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.

Episodes typically run an hour to ninety minutes — most land between 55 min and 1h 6m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Kids & Family show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed earlier today, with 18 episodes already out so far this year. Published by TOP Dog Training LLC.

Episodes
33
Running
2025–2026 · 1y
Median length
1h 1m
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

At Pawprint Academy, we believe great dogs start with great leadership. Hosted by the trainers behind TOP Dog Training, this podcast gives you the proven blueprint to build Trust, Obedience, and Performance in your pack. From tackling everyday struggles like leash pulling and recall, to creating structure and harmony at home, we share real-world strategies, client stories, and expert insights to help you raise a better dog AND become the leader your pack needs.

Latest Episodes

View all 33 episodes

Outdoor Adventures: Taking Your Dog Out in Public

May 19, 20261h 3m

When to STOP 'Treating' Your Dog

May 11, 202651 min

Noise Sensitivities: Thunderstorms, Fireworks, and Beyond

Apr 27, 202652 min

Dog-to-Dog Aggression: Managing and Retraining Safely

Apr 20, 20261h 6m

Leash Reactivity: Reading Body Language and Correcting Early

Apr 13, 20261h 9m

Ep 27Crate Anxiety: Fixing Whining and Panic in the Kennel

Crate anxiety is one of the most misunderstood dog behavior problems, and most owners are accidentally making it worse. Whining, barking, and panic in the crate are not random; they are learned behaviors that have been reinforced over time. When a dog cries and gets attention or is released, they learn that emotional behavior works. This episode breaks down why crate training fails when there is no structure, no clear communication, and no follow-through. If your dog struggles in the kennel, the issue is not the crate, it is the lack of clarity around what behavior actually leads to freedom.Most common advice focuses on comfort, adding blankets, toys, or sitting next to the crate to reassure the dog. That approach sounds good but it does not fix the root problem. Dogs do not need more comfort, they need clear expectations and consistent outcomes. This episode explains why releasing a dog during whining builds stronger anxiety, why ignoring the problem without a plan leads to frustration, and how poor timing from the handler creates confusion. You will learn how crate anxiety develops, how to stop reinforcing it, and how to start building calm behavior the right way.We walk through a step-by-step approach to crate training that builds confidence, independence, and emotional control. You will learn how to reward calm behavior with proper marker timing, how to structure short successful sessions, and how to progress without overwhelming your dog. We also cover how crate training connects directly to overall obedience, leadership, and household structure. If you want a dog that can settle quietly and confidently in the crate, this episode gives you a clear, practical system to make that happen.

Apr 6, 202647 min

Ep 26Pulling Toward Dogs or People: The Gateway to Reactivity

This episode breaks down one of the most misunderstood behaviors in dog training, pulling toward people and other dogs. Most owners label it as friendliness, but that is incorrect. What you are seeing is arousal, fixation, and a lack of impulse control. When a dog is allowed to pull and reach what it wants, that behavior becomes self-reinforcing. Over time, excitement turns into frustration, and frustration is what fuels leash reactivity, barking, and lunging. If you do not address this early, you are not dealing with a social dog, you are building a reactive one.We explain why the walk is not just exercise, it is a daily leadership test. If your dog is deciding where to go, how fast to move, and when to engage with distractions, you are losing influence in the exact moments that matter most. This episode teaches you how to shift that dynamic. You will learn how to build a neutral dog that can exist around people and other dogs without needing to engage them. That neutrality is what creates reliability, better obedience, and real-world control, not forced socialization or constant interaction.We also give you a clear, practical framework to fix the problem. You will learn how to read early body language, interrupt fixation before it escalates, and reinforce disengagement the right way. Timing, consistency, and clear communication are the difference between progress and frustration. This episode gives you a step-by-step path to stop pulling before it becomes reactivity, and build a dog that walks with you, not toward everything else.

Mar 30, 202650 min

Ep 25Overexcitement at the Door: Chaos, Jumping, and Loss of Control

Overexcitement at the door is one of the most common breakdowns in household structure, and one of the clearest indicators of weak leadership in the home. In this episode, we break down exactly why door chaos happens, starting with how anticipation, lack of boundaries, and inconsistent patterns create a rehearsed state of arousal every time the doorbell rings or a handle moves. What looks like excitement is actually a conditioned behavior that has been repeated and reinforced over time.We explain why most common fixes fail, including yelling commands, repeating “sit,” or physically restraining the dog without teaching a clear alternative behavior. These approaches suppress the moment but do not change the pattern. We walk through how to replace chaos with clarity by installing structure around thresholds, controlling access to the door, and teaching the dog what calm behavior actually looks like in that context. This includes the use of place work, leash guidance, and clear marker timing to interrupt escalation early and reinforce stability.We also cover how handler emotion, timing, and inconsistency directly fuel the problem, and how small mistakes at the door compound into long-term behavioral issues. This is not just about manners, it is about safety, control, and accountability. If your dog loses control when guests arrive, this episode gives you a clear framework to fix it through leadership, repetition, and structure.

Mar 23, 202646 min

Ep 24Digging and Yard Destruction: Why Dogs Do It and How to Stop It

Many dogs develop a habit of digging in the yard, and once the behavior starts it often gets worse over time. In this episode, we explain why dogs dig, including instinct, boredom, frustration, scent seeking, and simple reinforcement from the act itself. Digging is naturally rewarding for many dogs, which means the more they rehearse the behavior, the more likely it becomes a permanent habit.We also break down why the most common solutions fail. Punishing a dog after the hole is already dug does nothing to teach the dog what should happen instead. Filling holes, spraying repellents, or chasing the dog away from the yard rarely works because the dog still has the same unmet needs and the same opportunity to practice the behavior again the next day.Most importantly, we walk through practical strategies to stop digging by removing rehearsal and creating structure outside. Owners will learn how to supervise outdoor time, meet their dog’s physical and mental needs before free time in the yard, and create clear rules about what is allowed in outdoor spaces. When leadership, structure, and engagement are in place, digging stops being the dog’s favorite activity and the yard becomes a calm, structured environment again.

Mar 16, 20261h 4m

Ep 23Separation Anxiety vs Separation Frustration: Knowing the Difference Matters

Many dogs struggle when left alone, but not all of them are suffering from true separation anxiety. In this episode, we break down the critical difference between separation anxiety and separation frustration, two behaviors that look similar but require very different solutions. Owners often mislabel the problem, which leads to ineffective training, worsening behavior, and unnecessary stress for both the dog and the family.We explain why dogs panic, bark, destroy, or pace when their owners leave, and how a lack of structure, independence, and clear leadership can unintentionally create emotional dependency. You will learn how dogs develop unhealthy attachment patterns, why constant affection can backfire, and how everyday household routines influence your dog’s emotional stability.Most importantly, we walk through practical strategies to build calm independence at home. Through structured routines, clear expectations, and gradual separation training, owners can teach their dogs that being alone is safe and normal. The goal is not to ignore the problem, but to develop a dog that is confident, relaxed, and capable of settling without constant human presence.

Mar 9, 202651 min

Ep 22Counter Surfing and Food Stealing: Stopping the Habit at Its Source

Counter surfing does not happen because your dog is stubborn. It happens because it works. One successful theft can outweigh ten verbal corrections. Food left on the counter becomes a slot machine that occasionally pays out big. In this episode, we break down the behavioral science behind counter surfing, why punishment after the fact fails, and why emotional reactions from owners often strengthen the problem instead of solving it.You will learn how to eliminate opportunity, structure the environment, and build impulse control around food using clear leadership and reinforcement of calm alternatives. We focus on prevention over punishment, management over frustration, and consistency over intensity. If you want a dog that can ignore food on the counter without constant micromanagement, this episode gives you a practical blueprint rooted in obedience training, pack leadership, and repeatable systems that the average family can apply immediately.

Mar 2, 20261h 6m

Ep 21Chewing and Destructive Behavior: Why Dogs Destroy Things and How to Stop It

Destructive chewing is not random, and it is not your dog being spiteful. Dogs chew because of biology, stress, boredom, teething, lack of structure, or because they have learned that chewing furniture works. In this episode of Paw Print Academy, we break down the real reasons behind destructive chewing and counter surfing, and why punishment after the fact fails every time. If you are searching for answers about dog behavior problems, obedience training, or how to stop your dog from destroying the house, this episode gives you a practical, science-based path forward.We explain why yelling, rubbing a dog’s nose in damage, or correcting minutes later does nothing to change behavior. Dogs learn through timing, clarity, and consequence, not emotion. The real solution is leadership, management, and structured training. That means crate training done correctly, structured exercise, clear boundaries around food and furniture, and proactive obedience training that teaches impulse control before temptation shows up. Prevention is not weakness; it is smart dog training.If you want to stop destructive chewing, you need to meet your dog’s physical and mental needs while tightening up your household rules. We walk through how to create daily structure, how to use place and crate commands to prevent chaos, and how to build reliability so your dog can be trusted unsupervised. This is about becoming a calm, consistent pack leader who sets standards and follows through. When you combine structure, accountability, and clear communication, destructive behavior fades and a stable, obedient dog takes its place.

Feb 23, 202655 min

Ep 20Excessive Barking: Why Dogs Bark and How to Reduce It Without Chaos

Excessive barking is rarely a dog problem. It is a learned behavior that has been reinforced over time by human reactions. Dogs bark because barking works. Attention, eye contact, talking, yelling, or even pushing a dog away can all reward the behavior. When leadership and structure are unclear, barking becomes the dog’s primary way to control the environment. This is why simply “ignoring it” often fails. Without clear expectations and follow-through, barking fills the leadership gap.Fixing excessive barking requires structure, not emotion. The solution starts with removing the payoff, interrupting early with calm authority, and immediately redirecting the dog into a known command like place, sit, or down. Silence must be reinforced just like any other behavior. Daily structure, accountability, and consistency matter more than corrections alone. When owners stop negotiating and start leading, barking fades quickly. The dog did not change, the system did.

Feb 16, 20261h 10m

Ep 19Jumping on People: Why Dogs Do It and How to Stop It

Jumping on people is one of the most common dog behavior complaints and one of the most misunderstood. In this episode, we explain why dogs jump, how owners accidentally reinforce it, and why common corrections make it worse. You will learn how to replace jumping with calm behaviors, structure greetings for success, and build polite interactions that last.

Feb 10, 202658 min

Ep 18Heel Work: Static vs Dynamic and Why Both Matter

Heel work is one of the most precise and engaging skills a dog can learn. In this episode, we explain why static and dynamic heel both matter, how to teach each one clearly, and how to combine them for a complete, reliable heel. You will learn practical drills, timing strategies, and the common mistakes that cause sloppy walking. This episode helps owners understand how heel work builds teamwork and strengthens connection between handler and dog.

Feb 2, 20261h 2m

Ep 17Drop It and Leave It: Stopping Resource Guarding Early

Drop It and Leave It are two of the most important cues for safety and trust. This episode explains why guarding develops, how to prevent it, and how to teach these cues clearly and confidently. You will learn how to reduce conflict, reward calmness, and build a dog that disengages willingly. These skills prevent problems before they escalate and create a respectful relationship around shared spaces and objects.

Jan 26, 20261h 11m

Ep 16Sit, Down, Stay: Building Duration Without Frustration

Sit, Down, and Stay are the backbone of impulse control training. In this episode, we break down how to teach clean positions, how to build duration without creating stress, and how to use these commands in real daily life. You will learn how to avoid the most common mistakes owners make, how to build calmness into obedience, and how to give your dog a structure they can trust.

Jan 19, 202658 min

Ep 15The Place Command: Teaching Calmness in the Home

'Place' is one of the most valuable lifestyle skills a dog can learn. It teaches calmness, impulse control, and neutrality in the middle of household activity. In this episode, we break down why Place matters, how to teach it clearly, and how to integrate it into daily life for lasting results. You will learn the value of structured calmness and how Place can transform chaotic environments into peaceful routines.

Jan 12, 20261h 4m

BONUS EPISODE: Interview with Sierra Parks - Owner of Summit Kennels

bonus

Interview with Summit KennelsFeaturing: Owner of Summit Kennels, Military Veteran, Tactical K9 Professional, and Woman Business Leader - Sierra ParksIn this episode of Paw Print Academy, we sit down with the owner of Summit Kennels. She is a military veteran, an experienced handler in tactical K9 environments, and the owner of a respected dog training company that continues to make a strong impact in the community.We cover her journey from military service to professional dog training, how tactical K9 experience shaped her approach to working with dogs, and what it takes to build a successful company in a demanding industry. She shares valuable advice for new dog owners, stories from the field, and the leadership principles that guide her mission at Summit Kennels.We also talk about the importance of collaboration between trainers, how both companies share similar values, and why building a supportive dog training community benefits everyone. This episode is filled with practical takeaways, great stories, and a strong message about leadership, teamwork, and raising the standard of training in our region.Whether you are a dog owner, an aspiring trainer, or someone who loves hearing from leaders who have earned their place in the field, this interview delivers insight and inspiration.

Dec 29, 202538 min

Ep 14The Recall: Why it fails, and how to fix it.

Recall is the most important safety command your dog will ever learn, but many owners unintentionally sabotage it. This episode breaks down the most common reasons dogs ignore Come, how to rebuild the command from the ground up, and how to create a recall your dog wants to perform.You will learn why long lines matter, how to prevent cue poisoning, and how to build speed and reliability through structured proofing. By the end, you will have a clear system to transform your dog’s recall into a dependable behavior.

Dec 23, 20251h 1m
TOP Dog Training LLC