Sherry Woodard | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Certified dog trainer, ethologist, TV show star |
Years active | 1993–present |
Known for | DogTown TV series |
Website | Speaker profile |
Sherry Woodard is an American animal behavior consultant, certified dog trainer, [1] and a star cast member of National Geographic Channel's four-season DogTown series.
Woodard received her dog trainer certification from the Certified Council for Professional Dog Trainers, as well as knowledge-assessed certification. [2] Woodard's Dog Behavior and Handling Workshop was approved for continuing education credit by the same council. [1]
Woodard starred in 31 episodes of National Geographic Channel's series DogTown from 2008 to 2010, mostly filmed on the setting at the southern Utah Best Friends Animal Society's sanctuary. [3] [4] She appeared on NBC's The Today Show with veterinarian Patti Iampietro to talk about their work featured in the Dogtown series. [5]
She worked directly with 22 of the pit bulls from the dog-fighting kennels of Michael Vick, a former Atlanta Falcons football player who served a prison sentence for operating a dogfighting ring. [6] In a profile Q&A in People magazine, Woodard discussed her work with some of the Michael Vick dogs featured on the DogTown show. [7]
Her tips for adopting the right dog and cat were featured in Parade magazine in 2013. [8] She also provided details in 2017 to the Huffington Post on leash training a cat. [9]
In 2014, Parade featured Woodard's Canines with Careers program, which she founded and ran for Best Friends Animal Society beginning in 2009 to train shelter dogs as working canines for people with disabilities or special needs. [10] Woodard designed the program as a nationwide network of trainers who could rescue dogs from shelters and teach them to aid humans. [11] Canines with Careers was included in the book Unconditional Honor: Wounded Warriors and Their Dogs about Woodard successfully placing trained canines in various careers, including with law enforcement officers, K-9 dog handlers for canine search teams, prison staff, first responders during emergencies, and as service dogs with disabled veterans. [12]
In 2013, Woodard helped individuals and groups train and place 380 working dogs through her Canines with Careers program. [10] She participated in a March 2015 celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act at the Red Rock Center for Independence at Dixie State University in St. George, Utah. [13] Woodard's stated vision of shelter dogs as an option is to "provide a compassionate, less time-consuming and more cost-effective alternative to the traditional model (of service dogs). People’s lives will be enriched and dogs previously without any future are now saved." [14]
Woodard was instrumental in Hurricane Katrina pet rescue, working with thousands of injured and stressed animals left behind in New Orleans in the aftermath of the 2005 storm. [6]
Frank Inn, born Elias Franklin Freeman, was an American animal trainer. He trained several animals for television programs and movies, including the dogs in the Benji series and the cat Orangey. He also trained the dog in Honey, I Shrunk the Kids.
An animal rescue group or animal rescue organization is a group dedicated to pet adoption. These groups take abandoned, abused, or stray pets and attempt to find suitable homes for them. Many rescue groups are created by and run by volunteers, who take animals into their homes and care for them—including training, playing, handling medical issues, and solving behavior problems—until a suitable permanent home can be found.
In some countries there is an overpopulation of pets such as cats, dogs, and exotic animals. In the United States, six to eight million animals are brought to shelters each year, of which an estimated three to four million are subsequently euthanized, including 2.7 million considered healthy and adoptable. Euthanasia numbers have declined since the 1970s, when U.S. shelters euthanized an estimated 12 to 20 million animals. Most humane societies, animal shelters and rescue groups urge animal caregivers to have their animals spayed or neutered to prevent the births of unwanted and accidental litters that could contribute to this dynamic.
Pooch Café is a Canadian-American gag-a-day comic strip written and illustrated by Paul Gilligan. It was also made into a series of online shorts with RingTales.
Victoria Stilwell is an English author, dog trainer and television presenter. Stilwell has appeared as a pet behavior expert and served as a producer on several international TV series including Dogs Might Fly, Dogs With Extraordinary Jobs, and Greatest American Dog (CBS), and is best known as the star and creator of the dog training TV show It's Me or the Dog.
A no-kill shelter is an animal shelter that does not kill healthy or treatable animals based on time limits or capacity, reserving euthanasia for terminally ill animals, animals suffering poor quality of life, or those considered dangerous to public safety. Some no-kill shelters will commit to not killing any animals at all, under any circumstance, except as required by law. A no-kill shelter uses many strategies to promote shelter animals; to expanding its resources using volunteers, housing and medical protocols; and to work actively to lower the number of homeless animals entering the shelter system. Up to ten percent of animals could be killed in a no-kill shelter and still be considered a no-kill shelter.
Best Friends Animal Society, (BFAS) founded in its present form in 1993, is an American nonprofit 501(c)(3) animal welfare organization based in Kanab, Utah with satellite offices in Atlanta, Georgia, Bentonville, Arkansas, Houston, Texas, Los Angeles, California, New York City, and Salt Lake City, Utah. It also has a partnership network with shelters, rescue groups and members in all 50 states and Washington, DC, to promote pet adoption, no-kill animal rescue, and spay-and-neuter practices. Best Friends has a 4-star 'Give With Confidence' rating from Charity Navigator.
Patricia Bean McConnell, Ph.D, CAAB Emeritus is an Ethologist who consulted with pet dog and cat owners for over thirty years regarding serious behavioral problems, has given seminars on companion animal behavior both domestically and internationally, and has written several books on training and behavior relating to their dogs. She has been invited to speak all over the world about canine behavior and training.
Tamar Geller is a dog trainer who developed "TheLoved Dog" method of dog training. After serving as an intelligence officer working with the Israeli Special Forces, she spent time observing wolves in the wild and studying how parent canines trained their young. By using similar techniques as the wolves, she created a method for training puppies that does not involve aggression, dominance, or choke chains. She is the founder of the first cage-free doggy boarding and day care center in southern California, called The Loved Dog. Her book of the same name teaches dog-owners methods to train their dogs in a nonaggressive way.
BAD RAP is an animal welfare and rescue group based in Oakland, California, devoted to caring for and improving the public image of pit bull terriers as pets.
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Bonita M. Bergin is an American canine researcher. She is the inventor of the concept of the service dog. She is the founder and president of the Bergin University of Canine Studies and the founder of Canine Companions for Independence and Paws for Purple Hearts.
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Ana was a golden retriever search and rescue dog, known for having been the first graduate of the Search Dog Foundation's training program. Ana was one of the first search dogs to be deployed to the site of the World Trade Center following the September 11 attacks.
Cynthia Bathurst is an animal welfare advocate, winner of a national veterinary award, and founder and director of Safe Humane Chicago, a nonprofit which includes the first of its kind Court Case Dog Program.
John Garcia is a dog trainer, star of National Geographic Channel's four-season DogTown series, and holder of a Guinness World Record.
Clay Myers is an American photographer, videographer and animal welfare advocate best known for his portraits of rescued companion animals.
Dumb Friends League (DFL) is an animal shelter based in Denver, Colorado. Established in 1910, DFL is the largest independent, nonprofit community-based animal shelter/humane society in the Rocky Mountain region.
Mardi Paws is a Mardi Gras procession in Covington, Louisiana dedicated to animal welfare.