PODCAST · education
Talk Sh*t, Get Bit
by Michael
On the Talk Sh*t, Get Bit Podcast, Michael Parker and Chris Flannery talk all things K9. They share insights on creating a better relationship with your K9 by sharing their combined years of experience and interviewing other experienced handlers and trainers.
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11
Learn The Early Warning Signs Of Heat Stress Before It Turns Into An Emergency
Send us Fan MailYour dog can’t say “I’m overheating” or “I’m done” and that’s why summer is so dangerous for even the most “normal” family pet. We break down dog overexertion and heat-related injuries the way handlers actually experience them: the first subtle changes in breathing, the difference between content panting and exhausted panting, and the early red flags that mean you stop right now instead of finishing the trail.We also get practical about canine first aid. We talk safe hydration without encouraging gulping that can raise bloat risk, simple cooling methods that help in the field, and how to read gum color, drool, and behavior when heat stress turns serious. Then we go deeper into planning: knowing your dog’s baseline temperature, what numbers should scare you, how to cool while transporting, and why having your vet and emergency vet saved with a real route plan matters when traffic and minutes can decide outcomes.A big part of the conversation is vehicles. We share a painful story about how fast things can go wrong when a car shuts off, even with AC running earlier, and why heat sensors and alarms are helpful but not a substitute for frequent eyes-on checks. We wrap on a better note with a heroic service dog story and a wider takeaway about purpose, recovery, and the relationship we choose to build with our dogs.If you got something useful here, subscribe, share it with a dog owner who needs the reminder, and leave us a review. What’s one heat-safety habit you want to improve before summer hits?
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10
What If Every Dog Problem Is A Consistency Problem
Send us Fan MailIf you’ve ever said “my dog knows better,” we’re going to challenge that with a hard truth: dogs don’t follow your intentions, they follow your patterns. Michael and Chris break down why consistency is the real foundation of dog training, and how small exceptions like “it’s fine when he jumps on me” quickly turn into confusion, conflict, and behavior that feels out of control.We get practical about obedience and communication, including why we like implied stay, how clean rules make it easier to chain commands, and why keeping training simple helps both the handler and the dog stay on the same page. We also talk about boundaries, dog-specific capacity, and how permission-based behaviors can work only when the signals are crystal clear. From there, we move into working dog and protection dog training, where consistency becomes muscle memory under stress, from bite targeting systems to building a calm on and off switch.Then we shift into a tough news story out of Martinsville, Indiana: a police handler shoots a reactive department canine and buries the dog. We unpack what that says about canine selection, patrol dog social stability, maintenance training, handler responsibility, and the trust a community puts in a K9 unit.If you care about dog behavior, obedience training, reactivity, or working dogs, hit play, share this with a friend who needs clearer rules, and leave a review. What’s one rule you’re ready to enforce consistently starting today?
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9
How To Reduce Dog Reactivity Without Guesswork
Send us Fan MailReactivity looks loud, but the real story is usually quiet: fear, uncertainty, confusion, and a dog that learned the world only listens when it explodes. We sit down and get specific about what “reactive” actually means, why “aggression” is often misread, and how a dog can seem confident next to its handler while secretly falling apart underneath. If your dog barks at strangers, loses its mind at other dogs, or turns a squirrel into a full-body meltdown, we give you a clearer way to think about the problem and a safer way to start changing it.We talk threshold training and why sometimes the best progress comes from doing less: holding space, marking calm, and working closer in small rings instead of rushing the dog into failure. We also get into tools the right way, including muzzle training for safety, using an e-collar as communication to break fixation, and why misuse can create redirected aggression and “ghost bites.” Drive capping and impulse control come up too, because a dog that cannot disengage from drive cannot make good choices, even when it “knows” obedience.Then we shift to a current news story: a police K9 handler under investigation after video appears to show the dog being slammed. We break down why that is unacceptable, what training failure can look like in uniform, and why working dogs deserve real legal and professional accountability. Subscribe for more honest dog training talk, share this with a friend dealing with a reactive dog, and leave a review with your biggest reactivity question.
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8
Keeping A Protection Dog Sharp: When Does A Dog Become Your Liability?
Send us Fan MailA protection dog can be your strongest deterrent or your biggest liability, and the difference usually comes down to training maintenance and decision-making. We get specific about what separates sport dogs from real-world protection dogs and apprehension canines, including the hidden problems that show up when you try to “convert” a PSA or IGP dog. If your dog has been rehearsing bark and hold, or if it’s equipment savvy and locked onto sleeves and suits, that muscle memory can surface at the worst time.We also talk through the part most people avoid: the legal reality of deploying a bite dog. When do you de-escalate instead of engaging? Why do verbal warnings matter when everything is on camera? How can drive capping keep your dog from drowning out your commands? We connect the dots between handler defense, vehicle defense, tracking-based deployments, and why you must be able to articulate the who, what, when, where, why, and how after a bite. Training logs are not busywork; they’re evidence, troubleshooting, and protection for you, your dog, and your trainer.Then we shift to a hard news story out of Vermont: a fatal dog attack involving a dog with a prior bite history. We use it to highlight systemic failure, owner responsibility, and why “it hasn’t happened again yet” is not a safety plan. If you’re serious about protection dog training, apprehension training, or even just responsible ownership, this conversation is for you.Subscribe for more working-dog talk, share this with a handler who needs it, and leave a review with the biggest training mistake you see people make with bite-capable dogs.
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7
How HRD And SAR K9 Teams Train For Real-World Chaos
Send us Fan MailYou can train a dog to find an odor in a controlled space, but search work is a different beast. We’re joined by Amanda Ballard of Co-Operation Canine in New Mexico, a trainer with deep experience in search and rescue K9 work and human remains detection. We get into why SAR K9 teams face a huge range of variables across desert, buildings, vehicles, and loud unpredictable environments, and why “just keep searching” is a trained skill built on hunt drive and smart reps.Amanda breaks down what changes between live find and HRD dog training, including how weather and humidity can shrink the window for tracking, why area search becomes the practical answer, and why HRD odor is not a single simple target. We talk handler skills that matter just as much as dog talent: reading change of behavior, avoiding sloppy assumptions, and keeping dogs safe around source. We also dig into the hard parts people rarely say out loud, like the emotional impact of recoveries and why strong community support is not optional.We close with real-world guidance on doing this the right way: agency rules, certification, crime scene integrity, and why freelancing creates safety and legal problems. If you’re thinking about getting started, we also share what to expect from our upcoming five-day introductory search and rescue seminar (April 4th through the 8th). Subscribe, share this with a K9 handler or future handler, and leave a review. What part of SAR K9 work do you want us to go deeper on next?
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6
Service Dogs For Veterans: When A Dog Becomes A Lifeline
Send us Fan MailA trained dog can change the shape of a day—and sometimes it saves a life. We sit down with Joe Gionti from K9 Heroes for Heroes to explore how service dogs help veterans and first responders regain freedom, confidence, and control in places that once felt impossible: gun ranges, grocery aisles, airports, and crowded events. We go past the highlight reel into the work it takes to build a reliable partner, from deep pressure therapy and behavior interruption to blocking, covering, and quiet alerts that pull someone back from a spiral.We talk training with teeth: mapping a handler’s daily life so the dog is proofed for real scenarios, not just a checklist. Tools like e-collars and prongs are reframed as communication, layered over foundation obedience to keep clarity and safety first. We dig into ADA rights and boundaries—what staff can ask, when access can be denied, and how calm advocacy keeps everyone safer. You’ll hear why vests aren’t legally required, why some states recognize “service dogs in training,” and how equipment-savvy dogs stay focused with or without gear.The stories are raw and real. A nudge in a church pew stops a flashback. A center position at checkout eases hypervigilance. A once “mission-planned” Walmart run becomes a normal errand. We also face the hard part: losing a service dog can rip away hard-won stability, and planning for continuity matters. Finally, we unpack a viral clip of an officer kicking a loose dog near a police K9—what scene safety means, why least force matters, and how handlers must protect their partners.If you’re a veteran, first responder, or supporter who cares about responsible training, public access rights, and the life-changing impact of a well-matched team, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help more handlers and dogs find each other.
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5
From Bloodlines To Bite Work: How Genetics Shapes Training, Temperament, And Health
Send us Fan MailThink a strong pedigree guarantees a stellar working dog? We put that myth on the table and carve it open. We talk candidly about what breeding actually predicts—drives like hunt, prey, play—and what training sculpts over time, from environmental stability to social confidence. You’ll hear the exact field tests we use to separate true nerve from fragile reactivity: slick floors, tight spaces, dark rooms, metal bowls on tile, and how a dog’s curiosity or recovery tells the real story.We compare two high-performing protection dogs with very different profiles—one built for tactical clarity and public composure, another tuned for suspicion at home and in vehicles—and show why the on-off switch matters more than a flashy bark. We dig into research on heritability, epigenetics, and line breeding, explaining how stress on a dam can tilt a litter toward anxiety, why high inbreeding coefficients invite trouble, and how even “rock star” parents can produce a mixed bag. Breeds don’t get a pass: German Shepherds often present learned reactivity rooted in fear, while labs—ideal for scent work and PR—still bite and resource guard when training lags. We also tackle decoy mechanics and the fine line between building prey drive and accidentally reinforcing defense, plus why you should never teach an underconfident dog to bite.Then we shift to the street: police K9s and ballistic vests. From tight municipal budgets to grant bottlenecks, we break down the real costs of a working dog and the simple math that makes a thousand‑dollar vest a smart investment. We share practical ways departments and communities can partner with charities and run fundraisers to outfit dogs for the threats they’ll face—blunt force, blades, and bullets—so a trained partner comes home.If this helped sharpen how you judge bloodlines, evaluate puppies, or think about K9 gear, tap follow, share it with a friend who loves working dogs, and leave a quick review so more handlers and dog owners can find the show.
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4
Where Loyalty Meets Orders: What Do You Owe A Working Dog
Send us Fan MailA Marine-turned-horseman who found his calling in dogs. An Army combat vet who rebuilt his life through service, detection, and patrol work. We kick off our weekly show with raw stories of loss, sobriety, and the quiet power of training that gives chaos a voice and purpose a path. This is a candid look at why we do the work, how we do it, and what it costs when the stakes are real.We introduce our backgrounds, from Devildog Canine to Overdrive K9 Detection, and the everyday grind of building reliable service dogs, protection dogs, and detection teams. You’ll hear how obedience and communication underpin behavior change at home, why behavior modification requires more than tips and tricks, and how consistent reps, clarity, and timing turn reactivity into trust. We talk about using GI Bill education, networking with under-resourced agencies, and the value of lifetime support for veterans navigating VA processes, public-access rules, and the emotional load that comes with owning a service dog.Then we dive into a polarizing case: a K9 is shot while clearing a suspected drug site, and the handler disobeys a direct order to save his partner. We weigh the competing truths—follow the legal order and protect the team, or honor the bond with a dog who has stood between you and harm for years. From long-line choices to stack discipline, from 16-hour maintenance myths to real-world readiness, we break down how training, policy, and leadership can prevent a partner from getting isolated in the first place. We also explore the legal patchwork around whether a K9 is considered an officer and how that shifts the ethics and consequences of a split-second decision.If you live with a reactive rescue, deploy a patrol dog, or just want a stronger bond with your pet, you’ll take away practical insights on building a common language, setting fair boundaries, and training like it matters—because sometimes it’s the difference between loss and coming home. Subscribe, share with a fellow handler or dog lover, and leave a review telling us: where do you draw the line between duty and devotion?
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
On the Talk Sh*t, Get Bit Podcast, Michael Parker and Chris Flannery talk all things K9. They share insights on creating a better relationship with your K9 by sharing their combined years of experience and interviewing other experienced handlers and trainers.
HOSTED BY
Michael
CATEGORIES
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