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Skool Guidelines for the Canine Care Academy
Skool Canine Academy Community Guidelines Welcome to Skool Canine Academy! This is a learning-focused, supportive space for dog lovers, trainers, and professionals. To keep things running smoothly, please follow these guidelines: 🚫 No Spamming Members Do not privately message or promote services/products to other members without consent. If you receive spam, please report it directly to me. One warning will be given. Continued behavior will result in removal from the group. ❌ No Harassment Harassment, bullying, or intimidation of any kind will not be tolerated. Respect differences in experience, opinions, and training styles. 🤝 Be Polite & Respectful Treat others the way you’d want someone to treat your dog—with patience and kindness. Disagreements are fine; disrespect is not. 🐕 Stay On Topic Conversations should center around dogs, training, behavior, health, and learning. This is a professional and educational space—let’s keep it valuable. 🎓 This Is a Learning Environment Ask questions. Share knowledge. Be open to learning. No one knows everything (even that one person who thinks they do). Thanks for helping make Skool Canine Care Academy a positive, informative, and drama-free zone. Now let’s talk dogs 🦴🐾
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Welcome to the Canine Care Academy
🐾 The Canine Care Academy is a friendly, learning-focused community for dog owners, or anyone who loves dogs and wants to deepen their knowledge. My hope is to create a supportive space where people can ask questions, share experiences, and grow in confidence when it comes to caring for their dogs. This community is a work in progress, and we’re continually building and improving. New sections — including Q&A Discussions, Ask-a-Vet, Courses, and more — will be rolling out soon as the community grows. Our community centers around these core areas (with more coming soon): 💬 General Discussions A welcoming hub for everyday conversation — training wins, health curiosity, funny stories, challenges, and real-life dog moments. This is a judgment-free zone where everyone’s voice matters. ❓ Q&A Discussions (Coming Soon) A space for focused questions and shared learning, where members can post scenarios, offer insights, and learn from one another in a collaborative, respectful way. 🐶 Ask-a-Vet (Coming Soon) Access to professional insight to help members better understand health, behavior, and wellness topics — supporting informed decisions between clinic visits. 📚 Courses (Coming Soon) Structured, practical learning on wellness, behavior, nutrition, first aid, and responsible ownership — designed to build confidence and improve quality of life for both dogs and their humans. Overall, my goal is to create a kind, curious, education-driven community where people feel comfortable asking questions — and dogs benefit from the knowledge we share. Thanks for joining in while we build this together… kind of like house-training, but with hopefully, fewer accidents.
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The Canine Olfactory System
The capabilities of a dog's nose far outweigh anything our noses can do. Imagine living in the world being strongly led around by your nose.
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The Canine Olfactory System
Stress in dogs
Learning to read stress signals in dogs can go a long way in preventing a bite.
Stress in dogs
Infuriated with this profession.
I ran across an article in one of our Veterinary publications today. This section of the article infuriated me on many levels. 1. That they needed a study for this? Are Veterinarians NOT listening to their clients' financial concerns? Do they not realize Veterinary prices are OUT OF CONTROL? And 2. Even more infuriating to me, 73% of pet owners WERE NOT offered a plan b, or lower cost option? Which, to me, equates to the pet possibly not receiving any form of treatment at all. People can afford, what they can afford and if that means a plan b, or plan c, it should be offered. It might not be considered "gold standard" but if it's something that can help a pet, it should 100% offered. The pet should ALWAYS come first. Period. Full stop. People want to take the best possible care of their pets, but with out of control pricing and corporations running most practices where only the bottom line matters, it's hard to do that. That's one of the reasons we keep our prices as low as possible, offer options and have a Pay it Forward fund to help those pets who need help. I'm so ashamed of what this profession has become.😢😢 What are your thoughts on prices or the profession as a whole?
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Infuriated with this profession.
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Canine Care Academy
skool.com/canine-care-academy
Learn, share, and grow with dog lovers who want to understand veterinary care, ask better questions, and advocate confidently for their pets.
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