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Kaia camping

About Muttamorphosis 
Dog Training

Bette Stallman Brown, PhD, Owner and Mutt Mentor

I earned my PhD in biopyschology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Early in my studies, I focused on motivation, learning, brain physiology, and neuroethology. Later, I shifted to ethology and evolutionary biology. My dissertation research centered on the social behavior and reproductive success of marmots living at high elevation in the White Mountains of California. A far cry from dog training, but it was pretty cool.

Though I’d dreamed since childhood of following in Jane Goodall’s footsteps, I found, to my dismay, that the animal behavior field was saturated with field researchers. In other words, no one was willing to pay me to sit on a step ladder at 12,000 feet, observing large, furry rodents!

I then spent four years working on human-wildlife conflict issues for The Humane Society of the United States. It was disheartening to see how certain wild animals, like coyotes, are treated in some areas. (Why kill them when we could train them?) So I went to Plan C: science writing. It’s engaging and it pays the bills. But animal behavior has always been my passion.

My return to animal behavior began in 2014, when we adopted our German shepherd/malamute mix, Kaia. By 2015, Kaia had inspired me to begin volunteering at our local animal shelter, Frederick County Animal Control, with the aim of helping other pets who’d found themselves homeless, like Kaia.

I established the all-volunteer Canine Enrichment Team at the shelter to provide socialization, manners, behavior modification, and off-campus excursions for the dogs. And I founded the shelter’s “friends” group, FFOCAS, to help raise needed funds for shelter pets.

Over the course of 6 years, I learned how easy (and rewarding!) it is to resolve dog behavior issues without punishment or intimidation. I gained experience with resource guarding, reactivity, and fear-related issues in addition to manners and impulse control. I even had the opportunity to train shelter cats as a way to help them gain confidence in the stressful shelter environment. I delved into the scientific literature on animal learning, canine behavior modification, and the application of ethology (my original research area) to life with dogs. I picked the brain of every trainer who crossed my path, and devoured every book and course I could find.

By late 2020, I realized that it was time to return to my roots and combine my research background with my more recent practical experiences by offering dog training and behavior modification services to help pet parents achieve harmony with their dogs.

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