You’re tired of dog advice that contradicts itself.
One site says crate train. Another says it’s cruel. A third says skip crates and just “let them figure it out.”
I’ve seen owners freeze up trying to choose.
That’s why I wrote this.
I’ve helped thousands of dogs and their people (not) in theory, but in living rooms, backyards, and vet waiting rooms.
No guesswork. No trends dressed up as science.
This is Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog.
It’s clear. It’s kind. It works.
You’ll walk away with three things you can do today (not) next week, not after buying new gear (today.)
Stuff that actually moves the needle on your dog’s calm, health, and trust.
Not another list of shoulds.
Just real steps. Real results.
The Foundation: Understanding Your Dog’s Language
I stopped treating my dog like a robot the day I realized he wasn’t ignoring me. He was telling me something.
And I wasn’t listening.
That’s where real ownership starts (not) with commands, but with translation.
You think a wagging tail means happy? Nope. A fast, stiff wag often means tension.
A loose, side-to-side wag? That’s usually safe. But context matters more than the tail alone.
Whale eye. When you see the whites of their eyes (is) stress. Not curiosity.
Not boredom. Stress. It’s their way of saying I’m not okay with this.
Lip licking? Not always about food. Often it’s anxiety.
Especially when they do it mid-petting or during vet visits.
Consent checks are non-negotiable. Before you scratch behind the ear, pause. Watch.
Does your dog lean in? Nudge your hand? Or freeze, look away, or lick their lips?
If they don’t offer clear consent. Stop. Try again later.
This isn’t “being soft.” It’s respect.
I use this every time I handle my dog’s paws or clip nails. One second I’m there. Next second I pause.
If he pulls back, I wait. If he offers his paw? We go.
No force. No guessing.
Positive reinforcement builds trust. Punishment builds fear (and) confusion. Dogs don’t connect delayed correction to the behavior.
They connect it to you.
That’s why I stick to treats, praise, and calm timing. Not yanks, shouts, or shock collars.
If you want real clarity on this stuff, start with Pet Advice.
Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog helped me reframe everything.
You’re not training an animal.
You’re learning a language.
Beyond the Bowl: Dog Food Is Not a Lottery
I used to pick dog food like it was a cereal aisle. Bright bag. Cute puppy on front.
Done.
Wrong.
The market is flooded with noise. Marketing nonsense. And ingredients that sound like lab accidents.
So here’s what I do now (and) what you should too.
Look at the first five ingredients. Named meat source comes first. Not “meal.” Not “by-products.” Chicken. Beef.
Lamb. Real food.
If corn, soy, or wheat shows up in those top five? Walk away.
Fillers don’t fuel dogs. They bloat them. They itch them.
They cost you vet bills later.
I check labels before I even lift the bag.
Then there’s the weekly wellness check. Five minutes. Tops.
Teeth: tartar buildup? Yellow or brown at the gum line? That’s infection waiting.
Ears: redness? Odor? A little head-shaking?
Don’t wait for discharge.
Paws: cracks between pads? Dry, flaky skin? Salt or hot pavement does that.
Body: run your hands over ribs, spine, belly. Feel anything new? A lump?
A bump? Even if it’s small.
This isn’t hypochondria. It’s catching things early. Before they’re emergencies.
Preventative care isn’t optional. Vaccines. Flea/tick meds.
Heartworm prevention. All non-negotiable.
Skipping them isn’t saving money. It’s borrowing trouble (with) interest.
I’ve seen the ER bill for a tick-borne illness. It’s not worth it.
Llblogpet advice for dogs by lovelolablog 2 cuts through the hype. No fluff. Just what works.
You don’t need ten supplements. You need clean food. A quick scan.
And consistency.
That’s it.
Start this week. Not next month. Not after vacation.
Today.
A Tired Dog is a Good Dog (But a Fulfilled Dog is Better)

I used to think if my dog collapsed after two miles, we were done. Done well. Turns out?
That’s just physical exhaustion. Not fulfillment.
Boredom looks like chewing your favorite shoe. It sounds like barking at the wall for 20 minutes. It digs holes in your garden at 5 a.m.
None of that is “bad behavior.”
It’s your dog screaming into the void: “My brain is starving.”
Let’s fix that. Right now. No fancy gear required.
Try “find the treat” (hide) three kibble pieces in plain sight and let them hunt. Snuffle mats work great. Or grab a towel, scrunch it up, and bury treats in the folds.
Puzzle toys? Start with a muffin tin covered in tennis balls. Easy.
Cheap. Effective.
Teach one new trick this week. Even “touch” with their nose counts. And try a Decompression Walk: quiet park, long leash, no destination.
Let them sniff, pause, circle, be.
Their shoulders drop. Their breathing slows. They look present.
That last one? It rewires stress. I’ve watched anxious dogs melt on their first Decompression Walk.
Which brings me to scent walks (same) idea, but you follow them. They lead. You observe.
You stop when they stop.
You’re not training. You’re listening.
This isn’t fluff. It’s basic biology. Dogs evolved to solve problems with their noses and paws (not) just trot beside us on pavement.
I’ve seen owners swear by long walks. Then wonder why their dog still chews the couch.
They’re missing half the equation.
Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog nails this balance. It’s why I send people straight to the Infoguide for Kittens Llblogpet when they ask about early enrichment. Same principles apply.
Mental work tires dogs deeper than miles ever will. Try it for three days. Watch what changes.
Leash Pulling vs. Jumping: Fix One, Then the Other
Leash pulling isn’t disobedience. It’s momentum. You walk.
They pull. They get where they want. Simple math.
So I stop. Every time. Not yank.
Not tug. Just freeze. Stand still like a tree.
Wait.
They look back. Sniff. Sit. Then I move.
It takes three walks. Maybe five. But they learn fast: pulling = nothing happens.
Jumping on guests? That’s excitement, not rudeness. Punishing it just makes them sneakier.
I taught my dog “go to your mat” instead. Doorbell rings → she sprints there → gets a treat. No drama.
No scolding.
You don’t need ten tricks. Just one solid alternative (and) consistency.
That’s what works. Not force. Not frustration.
I covered this topic over in Llblogpet Advice for.
For more straightforward fixes like this, check out the Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog page (it) cuts through the noise.
Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog
You’re Already Enough for Your Dog
I’ve watched people freeze up trying to “get it right.”
They scroll. They second-guess. They feel like failures before the walk even starts.
That stops now.
Great dog ownership isn’t about perfection. It’s about showing up. Watching closely, listening well, and choosing kindness over correction.
You don’t need more advice. You need clarity. Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog cuts through the noise.
Feeling lost? Try this instead:
This week, pick just one enrichment activity from this guide. Do it with your dog for 10 minutes each day.
That’s it. No pressure. No tests.
Just presence.
You’ll notice something shift. So will your dog.
Your bond isn’t built on flawless training.
It’s built on moments like these.
Start today.

Ask Sue Buschericks how they got into adoption and rescue resources and you'll probably get a longer answer than you expected. The short version: Sue started doing it, got genuinely hooked, and at some point realized they had accumulated enough hard-won knowledge that it would be a waste not to share it. So they started writing.
What makes Sue worth reading is that they skips the obvious stuff. Nobody needs another surface-level take on Adoption and Rescue Resources, Health and Nutrition for Pets, Animal Behavior Insights. What readers actually want is the nuance — the part that only becomes clear after you've made a few mistakes and figured out why. That's the territory Sue operates in. The writing is direct, occasionally blunt, and always built around what's actually true rather than what sounds good in an article. They has little patience for filler, which means they's pieces tend to be denser with real information than the average post on the same subject.
Sue doesn't write to impress anyone. They writes because they has things to say that they genuinely thinks people should hear. That motivation — basic as it sounds — produces something noticeably different from content written for clicks or word count. Readers pick up on it. The comments on Sue's work tend to reflect that.
