Rory O' Neill - Dog Behaviourist & Trainer

Animals shouldn't be disposable, we should help them work through their problems ~ Sherry, Dog Town

Rory O' Neill


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Rory O'Neill is a professional dog behaviourist and trainer in Calgary, Alberta, founder of Rocky Mountain Animal Rescue, and has been rescuing dogs and cats most of her adult life. After rescuing, training, and rehabilitating thousands of dogs, Rory has gained a vast amount of knowledge and understanding of canine behavior. Rory counsels pet owners about puppy education, training and prevention; how to solve dog behavioral problems; the importance of socialization, household manners, basic training, and how to be the leader of your dog and why it is essential.

Rory O'Neill specializes in rehabilitating unruly and aggressive dogs, as well as dogs that have been traumatized (from puppy mills, early years living in cages, natural disasters, human cruelty, pit bull rings, abandonment, captivity of any form, starving puppies born to homeless mothers, and feral or partly feral dogs enduring extreme deprivations) and afflicted with post traumatic stress.

During a consult the pet owner's needs are assessed and that of their pet. Rory observes and explains the reason behind the behavioral problem, makes recommendations to modify behavior or rehabilitate their dog, demonstrates different techniques, teaches how to properly treat and praise using reward-based training; how to clicker train (a tool used to mark the timing of a desired behavior), when and how to use food in training to get maximum results, advise on the amount and type of exercise, how, when and why to discipline, and to overall expect more from their pet. Pet owners usually don't give their dogs enough credit - Dogs are Smart!

A training program is designed for each dog considering its age, breed, background, gender, size, temperament, environment, and owner. Many pet owners don't use appropriate discipline or exert enough leadership and confidence to gain necessary control over their dog(s). Seeing the need for dog owners to be head of the household, Rory conducts one-on-one lessons with her clients educating them how to gain their dogs respect by incorporating manners, respect, obedience training, and dog psychology into every day.

Well versed in canine psychology, Rory teaches pet owners about the true essence of a dog, particularly their pet, and how to appropriately discipline their furry friend in a way that works for dogs. She teaches her clients how to "think like a dog", dispelling myths and old-school training methods pet owners may have learned growing up or advised by friends, family, or by-the-book or aversive type dog trainers.

Rory O'Neill is a professional member of the following associations:

Dogs are pack animals that are expected to live up to their owners expectations, however, pet owners often don't understand how to fit a canine appropriately into a human household. Consequently, well-meaning pet owners often use human values on their dog and treat it like a child. Dogs have feelings and emotions similar to that of humans, however, the difference of raising a child and raising a dog are broad due to humans and dogs being different species. "Dogs need rules, boundaries and leadership to live in harmony in their human family's home." Rory teaches pet owners how to best go about achieving this.

Seeing the need and value in building confidence in dog owners, Rory counsels clients how to believe in themselves and their pet. During follow-up sessions, everyone often ventures outside the home to a dog park, hike, walks, client's office or seating at an outdoor coffee shop. In real outdoor world experiences pet owner's gain courage learning how to manage their dog during unexpected yet common circumstances. When the client's dog meets other dogs during these lessons, Rory points out how dogs communicate through canine body posture and how to redirect unwanted behavior.

Rory can assist pet owners with the following needs:

  • Aggression (fear, bullies, dominance, leash, red zone)
  • Re-establishing leadership
  • Socialization
  • Separation anxiety
  • Fear / Phobias
  • Household manners
  • Pulling on leash
  • Coming when called (Recall)
  • Resource guarding
  • Housetraining (pee outside in designated area)
  • Puppy training & prevention (highly important for those with puppies)
  • Crate training
  • Barking, destructive & unruly behavior
  • Multi-dog households
  • New pet ownership
  • Counseling children about training
  • Cat behavioural / litter box problems
  • Post Traumatic Stress
  • Pet adoption (matching dog to adopter)

Rescue Efforts:

To the world you are nothing, to a rescue dog you are the world ~ Author unknown

Rory O'Neill is a recipient of the Pioneer Spirit Award for rescue efforts during and after the worst pet disaster in history, Hurricane Katrina. She is also certified in Canine First Aid and currently working on Animal Rescue Certification. Some heartwarming achievements are listed below:

Volunteering, Humane Efforts, Career:

No one can do everything, but everyone can do something ~ Author unknown

Early Beginnings: Rory grew up always loving animals, graduated from San Jose State University in California, and compelled to help homeless dogs in the nearby kill-shelter that routinely took the lives of highly adoptable dogs and cats within days of arriving and notoriously misrepresenting the information on the cards on their cages, she began adopting one or two animals out at a time. The "shelter" used a cheap and fast way to destroy animals by gassing. The horrible gas chamber at the Pound (there's no easy way to kill a healthy animal), was their mode of killing homeless animals.

Out of sight, out of mind, the animals were terrified facing these dilapidated chambers by heartless employees who forced a terrifying and painful death upon thousands and thousands of helpless loving animals. This was common in many "shelters" throughout the U.S. and Canada and still goes on today. Most people "don't want to know". Rory would adopt/purchase a dog, cat or bunny take them home, bath and teach basic training to dogs, advertise to find them good homes, and basically do what she is doing today (and what anyone can do to help a homeless pet on "death row").

While rescuing from the nightmarish pound, Rory learned many people would not go into an animal "shelter" because they don't want to see all the dogs and cats that would never get out. The potential adopters felt they wouldn't be able to "pick just one", they wanted "to take them all", therefore, wouldn't save a one. Hence, breeders and puppy mills continued to exploit pets for profit at the detriment of hundreds of thousands of puppies and kittens in cages at animal shelters.

Wanting to work hands-on with animals and learn about dog training to help more shelter dogs, Rory was hired at a ranch in the California hills managing animals trained for film. Responsible for administration of the compound, Rory also began to spend one-on-one time with many of the neglected caged animals and focused on learning how to earn trust and be friends with many of the extremely bored, unstimulated, captive exotic animals in small cages on the compound. A Disney movie was in pre-production upon being hired at the compound and wolves were in the script, so Rory spent time with the trainers to learn how to train wolves, train without force, use positive reinforcement techniques, and with the use of the clicker, trained wolves to perform on cue. Involved in prepping dogs for another Disney movie, Rory learned that most of the dogs in film were from breeders. Consequently, Rory went to animal shelters looking for the breed and type of dog requested for the movie role, adopted it, trained it, took it to audition with producer, and one of the dogs was chosen for the staring role.

Wanting to further help animals and learn more about dog behaviour, Rory moved to Santa Barbara to work with a gifted dog behaviourist, John Sorosky, at Camp Canine. Working one-on-one with John, She learned about dog training, dog behavioral problems and consulting. Rory worked daily training in-house dogs basic obedience as well as consulting clients with difficult pet dog problems such as fearfulness, aggression, fixation, separation anxiety, phobias, and obsession. Rory's goal was to solve the behavior problem, help the frustrated pet owner, and keep the pet in its home!

Natural Disaster Rescue Efforts:

Rory spent over two months rescuing dogs and cats left behind at the demands of the police and military during Hurricane Katrina (there was a No Pet Policy...!!), and witnessed the corruption and chaos that left many people's beloved pets locked inside their own homes, starving for weeks and months at a time, endlessly waiting for someone to help them. She found many dogs and cats left in boarded-up houses in bathrooms or closets (the safest place during a hurricane, as long as there is no flood!). Not knowing the levies would overflow and break and the town would be flooded, pets were left swimming in the darkness of their homes now riddled with floating furniture, refrigerators, and little air to breath. Many dogs were forced to swim and stand on what they could to keep their heads above water for two weeks until the pumps to drain the city were put in place and working.

CONSULTATIONS

Rory O'Neill is available for consultations and lessons in Calgary, Cochrane, the Bow Valley and surrounding areas and phone consultations for pet owners not in the immediate area.

View Rory O'Neill's profile on LinkedIn

Rory can be reached at: rockymountainanimalrescue@gmail.com.