About Doug Parker

The DOuGTrainer has trained dogs since 2009, having trained four-legged clients in-person and remotely in Orlando, Los Angeles, The Canary Islands, Spain, The Philippines, The UK, Las Vegas and Henderson, NV. He’s a former Orlando Police Department volunteer in good standing. In college, he was a volunteer crisis hotline worker for three and a half years. His degree is in Computer Science, with minors in psychology and business.

He volunteers dog training time and effort, working with A Home for Spot, in Las Vegas to foster their toughest, hardest dog clients, rehabilitating them, and finally adopting them to loving families. His love and his passion is helping others with their dogs.

About the Training

The DOuGTrainer uses no collars, no clickers, and not treats. Regardless of the issue, age, history, or whatever, dog training problems almost always come down to patience. Training is usually done at your home for your convenience. Typically, you’ll see the start of the results in one training session.

The The DOuGTrainer shows you how to be calm and patient, that is, how to communicate with and how to be your dog’s leader. Many owners have dogs that don’t listen, that bark, that do what they want, they may even be eliminating in the home. It’s hard to understand, but it all comes down to patience and leadership. Dogs want and need discipline and strong leadership, and it’s what many owners are missing in the delivery. The DOuGTrainer shows you how to be that calm, patient leader. The leadership triggers the result from the dog—Nature has it programmed into every dog’s DNA.

There’s nothing new in the world of K9 training tools. The DOuGTrainer is able to quickly establish trust and communication, and involves you in the training process so that he trains the dog and he trains you at the same time.

If you’re not consciously leading your pack, then your dog is being your leader, and you don’t want that. The DOuGTrainer works with you and your dog to show you how to be the leader–how to be calm and patient, and to trigger voluntary submission from your dog.