Refining goofballs since 2003Knucklehead Training
Starting your Knucklehead
Knucklehead FAQs
-
Honestly? Many adolescent dogs. For most, the experience feels like a developmental phase where dogs have the confidence of a teenager with car keys and zero life experience.
Not “bad”, simply…a work in progress.
This stage usually starts around 6 months and can last well into 2 years, depending on breed, genetics, environment, and lifestyle.
Their nervous system, hormones, emotions, and instincts are all getting louder at once. Our job is to help them learn how to live in the human world without frying themselves or everybody else.
-
Mostly impulse control, clarity in communication, leash skills, and general engagement. For some, it’s residual, unaddressed handling issues and sneaky leadership issues that start to become more problematic.
We help with real-life problems like:pulling on the leash
jumping on people
barking at everything/nothing
reactivity
poor recall
overexcitement
rough play
counter surfing
demand barking
mouthing
inability to settle
crate frustration
door rushing
hyper fixation on dogs or people
But underneath all of that, we’re really helping dogs learn:
impulse control
emotional regulation
follow-through
relationship skills
spatial awareness
But under all that? We’re just using training as a through line for you to better connect with your dog. Sometimes what’s needed is awareness in your interaction with your dog and being able to get ahead of behaviors or know how to effectively guide them/yourself in the moment.
-
Adolescence changes the dog you thought you had.
The puppy who followed you everywhere starts noticing the world more than you. Their brain starts prioritizing movement, smells, dogs, people, freedom, excitement, and independence.
This is normal.
A lot of owners think training “stopped working,” but what’s really happening is that the environment has become more valuable than the relationship and structure supporting the dog. Also, the dog is known to be physically stronger and perhaps more willing to engage with the environment vs. look to the owner/handler for info (also very normal).
That’s why lifestyle training matters.
We don’t just teach commands in quiet rooms. We teach dogs how to regulate themselves in real life and where to put your energy to maximize engagement (aka your dog tuning to you) in the day to day. -
Most adolescent dogs are overwhelmed long before they’re aggressive.
Big feelings can look scary:
barking
lunging
jumping
grabbing the leash
body slamming
mouthing
reacting/melting down on walks
A lot of these dogs are emotionally overloaded, under-guided, overstimulated, or accidentally rehearsing this stuff every day.
We look at the whole picture:
sleep
routine
exercise balance
clarity
leash communication
environment
stress patterns
household energy
unmet needs
Behavior makes more sense when you stop looking at the moment and start looking at the pattern.
-
Most training focuses on isolated obedience, skills and “cues” to teach your dog. I mean, yeah that matters, AND…we focus on lifestyle.
Because the real problem usually isn’t:
“my dog can’t sit.”It’s:
the dog never truly settles
the dog is overstimulated all day
nobody taught emotional regulation
movement not being used as a regulator or way to connect
play getting ignored entirely as a way to leverage and build the relationship
failed training that led heavily with tricks instead of something that made sense to the owners (yep, happens all the time)
the relationship became noisy
the humans are exhausted and reacting emotionally too
We teach dogs how to live with people.
That means:
calmer walks
clearer communication
household structure
leash fluency
boundaries without conflict
confidence without chaos
freedom that the dog can actually handle
We help humans to start feeling connected to their dog again.



