http://www.tips-up.com/service-dog-training-seattle/

I am looking for a new service dog?
I can use a dog for a disodium serivice sezier and panic attacks that I had to give up my dog started axity exterma becuse haveing a separation issues after I was in the hosptal for a week and could not do the work I Apley trivial for programs that tran dogs that most programs are not for me disablites tran (I can buy dogs and trained privaly) I live in Seattle if anyone has some ideas about good I have a Traner race into account prolum it can not have a Thas not welll behaved dog in my apartment, so I need someone to start for me or I Traning I need a dog that is grown and of good behavior to work on restructuring a service dog
You can check out rescues for older dogs, and also check out the breeders. It is true that programs do not train for the attack response, but the challenge as you know is that the dog must respond naturally respond well to attacks. I also know that there is a service dog training club in Washington. Are you also familiar with Housing Act Fair and their rights to have a SDIt or emotional support animal, trained or not trained, the time it can provide a doctor's note. This gives you more options to take 90% SD and trained in training. The rest is personal preference. While a rescue dog could be great, also be aware that they are at greater risk problems of separation anxiety. I would suggest the use of "Lend an Ear" by Martha Hoffman would see what a good dog for personality. I think that race matters very little compared to the personality and temperament that you need, and their needs (cost of food, cleaning, maintenance). I know that smaller dogs are good for warning of attack, but if you have panic attacks due to PTSD, a more big, macho-looking dog might be more appropriate. Chihuahuas, poodles, labs, Chow-Chow, etc. can all work well as seizure alert dogs. Proper handling and selection of a dog is very important. Dogs that respond to the panic attacks and seizures are oriented and velcro their dogs, and are highly risky problems of separation anxiety if they are at all afraid or insecure. Can not get a trained dog and not create a daily training routine to help reduce separation anxiety problems and increase confidence. Meet with more than a trainer – received on a hotline to the list, talk to others about living with service dogs. You can contact an animal behavior to help you find a good match for you – preferably one, Happy-Go-Lucky Dog outgoing with their low aggressiveness, resilience large. I really suggest a medium to large dog, maybe a retriever or retriever mix, even a well-tempered rottweiler. herding breeds are diverse, but may be more formidable as puppies and young dogs, or become protective, and they need constant monitoring, so I could not recommend a breed of herding it would be right for you. You also need to continue learning more about dogs and dog psychology. Because of his disability, it is easy for you to inadvertently behave in a manner which will promote separation anxiety in a dog over time, unless you receive specific training on how to behave as you manages the separation of your dog and make consistent and help build confidence in your dog that separations are OK. Our service dogs should be almost perfect, but we need to really help our dogs do, every day. Ideas in preventing separation anxiety: * Submit your dog to a doggie day care once a week so they can get used to the separation and also eliminate the stress of working with you (this is difficult – seizure alert dogs are actually 24 / 7). * Have dogsat dog once a month or so, to develop a good relationship with your health care emergency "support network. * To reduce the Stress Call 911 – your dog fire stations and departments of the 911 visits, meet with the police – all uniformed and plainclothes, feed your cookies dog and teach the dog to these people are "special friends". * Do your homework and educate your advocate (someone who can manage people well and he supports) on how to bring your DS in the hospital. * Work in salute to the separation from her dog. pig ears, Kongs, etc. all help to make an initial separation. * Good train stays and the use of them, until your dog will stay offleash even if you are out of contact with eyes. Any SD MUST be able to pass the test of public access IDA standard separation or CGC. Work on this drive so that your dog can do better than essay tests. This is especially important if you know your dog is prone to that as evidence of character or past history (the house and rescue dogs are prone to this). My dog aces this easily – in real life, evidence not only – I say that is to be with that person, and forces. I worked hard on this issue because my old dog had separation anxiety and disorder panic so severe that we had to put on Prozac or euthansize her, she was that miserable. It was probably triggered by the dog next door burst into our yard and scaring it. She was a good dog's behavior, but she never was SD material because there was fear that matters would not be in public, but give it a situation of threat and turned back, to be head shy, shyness was noise – could not handle fireworks, and T-storms would find under bed. I have faced situations with my dog really afraid this would have caused my old dog to break and develop ongoing fears out in public, I guarantee, you MUST not accept only a "good behavior" dog – you need strong nerves. Once we stepped into an elevator and yelled at the man and took hands above their heads as if trying to scare us. My heart jumped, and my dog got scared a little, but I saw it was amazed and we calmed down and was just a pause before they entered the elevator and had sat in this strange corner opposite foot 6 (I could see was "safe" body language). Now that experience with my old dog – he would have backed down, screwed, opened the door to the staircase and kept going down all eight flights! And she did not I would like to enter a new elevator, if it was a bad big man in this country. Yes, you can probably empathize great time with my old dog … but that's the point – that your dog need socialization, training, and calm nerves, to be confident when you do not: D. Good luck finding a new dog!
Bark Busters Home Dog Training – David Wiley