+R/-P Dog Resource WebPage
+R/-P Dog Resource WebPage
Many of us have found articles, research papers, blogs, links, quotes ... lot’s of good stuff. And a lot of it could be interesting to others - or not. .... Whatever!
Anyway, this is a first attempt to compile a list of links according to kind. There will be no attempt to make judgements about relative merits of the material. If you like it, fine. If you don’t, fine. If you can use it, fine, if not, also fine.
When this page was started, the title “+R/-P Dog Resource WebPage” seemed like a good idea. Of COURSE, under very specific circumstances, we will use -R, especially in certain fear reduction protocols. And strictly speaking, it’s pretty hard to start a -R protocol without a +P at the edge. But that’s not the point. The point is, that in normal training and behavior modification, we try to stick to +R with as little anything else as possible. And there is the rub. What does THAT mean? It’s all a VERY slippery slope. So does anyone have a better title for the page that communicates to trainers and owners alike, what this page is all about? If so, please hit the Suggestions, submissions link and let me know. Thanks in advance!
One more thing (no, I’m not Steve Jobs). If you have any material you’d like to have linked to from here, let me know and if it’s appropriate (IOW NOT personally abusive, is NOT advertising your services, is relevant to positive dog training and yours to link to) it’ll be added.
Check out the
“Proof Positive Films” website

This page is growing out-of-control. Time for some leashed control (sorry Leslie). Here you’ll find a link to the newest entries according to the update date listed below. All together in one spot. You can also of course browse all the collected entries according to the categorical links above, but if you’re mainly interested in seeing the newest additions, click here and treat yourself (sorry for the pun).
Last update: March 7, 2012 2:15 pm
How to find OLD content:
Go to the particular category you're interested in, for example "articles". Do a text search for the “author” of the content on that particular page. For example, if Carl Cookietosser has a new article, click onto “Cookietosser” to mark it, then ctrl-c (Windows) or cmd-c (Mac). Then click the link to “Articles”. When the “Article” page appears, ctrl-f (Win) or cmd-f (Mac) and then ctrl-v or cmd-v and then hit “return” and you’ll be sent to the first instance of “Cookietosser” on that page. If not the right one, ctrl-g or cmd-g
Sounds complicated, but isn't.
What’s This All About?