The Fresh Patch Podcast - Where Good Pets Get It.
Welcome to the Fresh Patch Podcast where we talk about everything, from dog training, to potty talk. It's time to save your rugs, and get REAL! Fresh Patch has been featured on Shark Tank, Oprah and the Today Show. We're here to discuss why every pet owner should have real grass and the benefits that come with it. So sit back, relax, grab some treats and cuddle your furry friend, you won't want to miss an episode!
The Fresh Patch Podcast - Where Good Pets Get It.
Puppy Potty Training Essentials With Taylor Cezanne
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What if everything you thought you knew about dog training was missing a critical element? In this eye-opening conversation with professional dog trainer Taylor Cezanne, we explore the transformative power of force-free training methods that build happier, more confident dogs.
Taylor shares her journey from aspiring veterinarian to acclaimed dog trainer whose content reaches millions. After being mentored by the author of PetSmart's training manual, she developed a deeply empathetic approach that's changing how people understand their canine companions. "They're not doing anything bad or wrong ever," Taylor explains, drawing a thoughtful parallel between puppies and human toddlers. "It's really our job to navigate them through situations."
One revelation that might revolutionize your approach: unrealistic expectations are sabotaging your puppy's potty training. Taylor explains that consistency isn't just helpful—it's essential for developing what she calls "a secure dog." We dive into fascinating insights about dogs' internal clocks and how predictable routines create the foundation for successful training. The conversation takes a particularly interesting turn when Taylor reveals her observations about how products like Fresh Patch create seamless transitions to outdoor potty habits compared to traditional puppy pads.
Perhaps most powerful is Taylor's perspective on "misbehavior." Rather than seeing problems as defiance, she reframes them as communications of unmet needs. This simple shift transforms frustrating moments into opportunities for deeper connection with your dog. Whether you're struggling with a new puppy or looking to strengthen your bond with an older dog, this conversation offers practical wisdom that honors your dog's nature while making your life together more harmonious.
Follow @taylorcezanne on social media for more training tips and visit freshpatch.com to explore how real grass delivered to your door can simplify potty training.
Thanks for listening to the Fresh Patch podcast brought to you by Fresh Patch. We hope you enjoyed the show. Give us a like or a follow, or shop all of our real grass supplies at freshpatch.com. Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, Youtube, Reddit
Welcome to the Fresh Patch Podcast
Speaker 1Welcome to the Fresh Patch Podcast, where we talk about everything from dog training to potty talk. It's time to save your rugs and get real. This episode is brought to you by Fresh Patch, featured on Shark Tank, oprah and the Today Show. And here are your hosts, drew and.
Speaker 2Gabe, welcome everybody to the Potty Talk Podcast. This is episode 14. I'm pretty sure we're going into right now. So if you're new here, my name is Drew, marketing Director for Fresh Patch. Here with my lovely co-host.
Speaker 3My name is Gabe. I'm the Partnership Coordinator and if you're familiar with Fresh Patch, I'm sure you're familiar with our guests we have today. If you wouldn't mind introducing yourself guests we have today.
Speaker 4Um, if you wouldn't mind introducing yourself, yeah, hey, y'all, I'm taylor. Um, you might know me from making puppy training content and sometimes some fresh patch content too so happy to be here yes, thank you for joining.
Speaker 2We are really excited about this episode. Like you said, she makes fantastic fresh patch content, so check her out. Her potty training tips are amazing. Um, I was just showing my my family your videos that you made for us last night and they were like blown away. They're like why don't you post more of this and stuff, as a classic parents, you know. But, yeah, thank you for joining. We really appreciate it and we're just gonna dive in, ask you some questions, get to know you and, you know, tell everyone who Taylor is.
Taylor's Journey into Dog Training
Speaker 2So I think we'll just. You want to take it away? Dab right in.
Speaker 3Yeah, sure, awesome. So tell us a little bit about your, your journey with dog training. Like how did you start, how'd you get into it? And you know, like, how did you get to the point you are today?
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah, isn't that why we're all convening here today, right, which I think is really cool. So I've loved dogs ever since I was very little and I thought I wanted to be a vet, a vet but gosh, no, my, my. I shadowed a vet when I was like 10 years old and it was not for me and I never went back. So I kind of, for a little, I was like 10 years old and it was not for me and I never went back. So I kind of for a little while was like, oh, I guess I'll never work with dogs, whatever. You know, you're just a kid thinking that the vet is the only option.
Speaker 4But it wasn't until I was probably like 21 where I decided you know what I want to train dogs. It was actually my first dog that I got in my adult life. That made me get into dog training. Yeah, because she was an Australian Shepherd and I wanted to train her in a way that, like, was appropriate for her. So I got into it, I learned all about it, and then I applied for jobs and worked at PetSmart for a few years. That's where I became an accredited dog trainer, and now I do it online because I can reach more people that way.
Speaker 3Gotcha. So was there like some sort of like course or like training, like at PetSmart or like? I know a lot of people like learn things through YouTube and stuff like that these days, but like what was kind of your process of learning?
Speaker 4Oh man, I got really lucky because the PetSmart that I applied for in San Antonio, texas, was also like the head dog trainer at that location wrote the training manual on how to train dogs at PetSmart.
Speaker 1Yeah, her name was Jenny.
Speaker 4I forgot her last name but like she was a great mentor and she was very passionate She'd been at PetSmart her whole career. Like I said, she wrote the training manual Like she was really well, like she was so knowledgeable on it and she trained me like hands on for two weeks. And, of course, petsmart has their own employee training and they want you to go through lots of, lots of steps. So, yeah, it's a good training program. My mentor was great. I think she's still training dogs and that was like years ago.
Speaker 3Yeah, wow, that's awesome. Yeah, you ever reconnect with her recently oh, my gosh, I have her name.
Speaker 4I do have her name in my, in my phone, but no, I have not.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, yeah, no worries, no worries, that's just how it goes.
Speaker 2Cool. Yeah, that's awesome. I mean, what a way to get started and looks like he. You know you got some like perfectly placed job. You know pet smart to meet her and everything. So that's really cool.
Speaker 4Yeah, well, it's like purely force-free too, which I really enjoyed, because at the time I don't think you could have found much of that online. I'm sure it was out there, but it was nice and refreshing to be like in a in-person community that was like focused on force-free, which is great.
Speaker 3Yeah, that's. That's super cool, that's awesome, cool.
Speaker 2Well, you know. Moving more into the training and and stuff um, what training philosophies or methods do you have or do you follow, and why?
Force-Free Training Philosophy
Speaker 4Yeah, like kind of piggybacking off that. You know, it's very important for me to do force-free content, or you know, let me reword that. Um, yeah, we'll start with this new answer, but, yeah, kind of piggybacking off of that. You know, force free dog training is the only method that I push, especially because I make content that gets millions of views per month, and so it's important for me that anybody who's viewing that, anybody around the world, has a positive methodology to handle their dog in pretty much any situation.
Speaker 3Yeah, absolutely. It's really interesting. You say that because I know that there's kind of controversies going around with, like Cesar Millan or maybe of like the old school of thought of dog training. So was that something like you picked up through your mentor that you had met or like you know? How'd you come across that?
Speaker 4Yeah, no good question, gabe. I actually just gravitate and I think most of us nowadays gravitate towards a friendlier, more positive approach and more learning approach to training, and that just comes from having like empathy, I think, just being like a human, you know like care about the way the dog learns. To me it's very similar to like a human toddler or human baby. You know like they're not doing anything bad, they're not doing anything wrong ever, and it's really our job to like navigate them through that situation and to me, that never really requires force or pain.
Speaker 3Definitely yeah, no, I'm. I'm happy to see that it's getting more accepted to, like you know, accept dogs as part of the family, because I've always been like that, so that's super awesome yeah.
Speaker 2That's really cool.
Speaker 2My, my girlfriend just actually watched I don't know what it's called, but she watched a documentary on Netflix last night about dogs and she was like they were saying that there's there's no bad dog, like it just depends on what happens in the younger parts of their life. You know what I mean. So if you give them that empathy right from the beginning, like you know, your guides and stuff say that they're going to be a good dog, like there's no such thing as like a bad dog and like I don't know if you could attest to that, but you know, just from from the you know beginning stages, from the beginning of their life to, you know, to when they're older. But I thought that was interesting when she told me that and stuff, that you know that document I don't know what, I'm not quoting because I don't know what documentary it was but um uh, but yeah, I just thought that was interesting and kind of going on the empathy thing, um yeah, you know, I know who you're talking about it's matt weisner he's got a bald head.
Speaker 4He lives here in austin. I'm friends with him oh, no way yes yes, I know exactly who you're talking about. He does the no bad dogs, that's his brand there we go, there we go it's the same exact way. Yeah, he's, and he's old school in the dog training game yeah yeah, he's massively old, old school, like not in the methodologies. He's very positive, he's science back, but he does like he's right there with caesar milan I think they're on the same tv network or like the same producers and don't hope.
Speaker 4But, like when I talked to Matt probably over a year ago we went and got coffee he was telling me that it's like one of his passions to go face to face with Cesar Millan and be like hey, we can, there are no bad dogs here. How can we go about the philosophy when we don't think that anymore?
Speaker 2yeah, for sure, wow that's really cool, that's I'm glad I brought that up then, yeah like a cool guy.
Speaker 3Yeah, he is really cool, awesome. So, um, what are some sort of like misconceptions that you come across when it?
Speaker 4you know, there's a lot of myths and misconceptions there is, and there's like we could just go off and off on them, but one of my, the first thing that's in my mind right now, because I was training a puppy earlier today, is I might not be a misconception, but it's worth bringing up. It's that people have really high expectations of their puppies. I think yes, it's that people have really high expectations of their puppies? I think yes, and that kind of messes with their training a little bit.
Speaker 4You know, because when you label your dog as a bad dog, it's just where's the learning, where's the growth mindset, where's the? You know? It's like labeling your child as a bad kid. It's like, no, they probably just have a need that it's not being met right now. It doesn't have to be that deep, maybe they just the puppy has to go potty outside and it's digging at the door and you're like stop digging. But then he pees and you're like, oh, okay, I, you know what I mean. You kind of need to go back and reevaluate your expectations a little bit and say no, this is a four-month-old puppy, it still requires the same schedule it did two weeks ago.
Speaker 3Yeah, but some reason I mean most puppy parents just have really high expectations, I would say, and then it backtracks the training a little bit totally, and we come across that a lot like at fresh patch, when people are like, oh, my dog won't use it right away, like you know, and they get frustrated, which is totally understandable. Like you were saying, it's like you know raising a baby, essentially. So, yeah, it's important to like understand, like you know, to temper your expectations and, like you know, trust in the training process and all that sort of stuff. So that's a really good answer.
Speaker 4Yeah, with potty training, it's a huge one, right? And one reason why fresh patch is so cool because it's on, it cuts off. Well, how do you put? How do you put it? It makes the habit of like going potty like consistent and that's what like builds the actual like behavior, right? Yeah, totally Definitely.
Common Potty Training Mistakes
Speaker 2Yeah, very, very cool. It's a good way of putting it yeah Cool. So we got a long list. We're just going to keep throwing them at you, you know, throw them at me. So what are the most common potty training mistakes you see new dog owners make, so kind of piggybacking off what we were just talking about. But yeah, new potty training mistakes you see new dog owners make.
Speaker 4Oh, and this is just going back off of the puppy. I was just training today there we go.
Speaker 4Four months old, started and his mom was like I don't know why, but he started peeing. Like you know, I'd go in the room and then I'd see pee on the floor and I'm like he never did that before, why? And I'm like just because he got a little bit bigger doesn't mean that he's any smarter or has any more bladder control than like two weeks ago. And you know like we got to go back down to the. Are you still taking him out every time, like on the routine? Are you still taking him to the same square of grass every single time? I mean, he's still learning and so are you monitoring him and keeping your eyes on him all the time?
Speaker 4I think people get relaxed with it and comfortable we're getting comfortable after like four weeks in or six weeks with the new puppy, like oh, he's got it, like he's good no no, not at all. Like you see a little bit of it's like going to the gym, so it's it's like you go for four weeks and you see a little improvement and you're like I'm good. But you know, we all know that it takes way longer to actually stick you, you know.
Speaker 2Yep, yeah, that's my problem in the gym.
Speaker 1A little bit of results and I'm like awesome.
Speaker 2And then all of a sudden, it's been another four weeks where I haven't gotten it's been about two years for me, so you know well yeah you don't want to hear my numbers, but but yeah, no, that's a great, that's a great way to put it. You know, especially, you know, a good example for humans too, to compare. But, um, yeah, that's that's great and makes sense.
Speaker 4Yeah, absolutely I think we're all learning like we're all learning you know like we're even us humans are re-evaluating every day like that's all dog training really is is like taking the data you have and seeing how it needs to improve to get you to the goal, which is you. You know we're talking about potty training. You know we look at what happened that day and tweak a little thing here and there, and then tomorrow we're a little bit better.
Speaker 3Yeah, and every dog's so different, you know, so it's like a new process for every dog you have. So that's really interesting. So I love how all of our questions are kind of like leading into each other. So how can products like Fresh Patch, you know, kind of ease the pains of potty training or make it a little bit easier?
Speaker 4simply, it's like having your own home gym and you're struggling going to the gym. I mean, make a gym inside your house or get a kettlebell or something. Make it easier for you to make the habit stick because you want to live a healthy life. But in this case it's more important because you don't want your dog going potty in your house like ever. Yeah, no, and then the only alternative I mean the only solution for a long time, was puppy pets. So it's kind of refreshing to see a solution on the market that is meant for dogs like you're thinking of, the dog you know totally definitely.
Speaker 3Yeah, so you've trained like a number of dogs. Um, how has that transition been like from the fresh patch onto, like outside grass, like was it pretty smooth and like you know what sort of experience have you had with the dogs you've trained?
Speaker 4Well, that's a good question, Because when I bring the puppy over to my house, what's happening here is that somebody will drop off a puppy at my house and I'm basically the school for three hours or four hours in their school and they need somewhere to go potty. I have a big yard. I live in a condo. There's multiple dogs here, so the dog, the puppy's not going outside, unless they're a little older, of course. So I have the fresh patch in my place. They use the fresh patch, they're curious about the fresh patch and their parents are telling me that it translates really well going outside. Now, when I don't have a fresh patch in my house because sometimes I'm in between like shipments and I don't have it for a few days, and I put a puppy pad out, the interesting thing is the mom or dad will tell me that that puppy went inside, and they don't usually do that.
Speaker 4Wow, I know which is kind of what's going on with the puppy I was just with today and he's she's like well, why is he going inside, like they have a backyard? You know, and I'm like well, that one time he was at my house he did potty on the on the puppy pad, because I'd rather him potty on a pad than me take him outside and he doesn't know any of the dogs that live here, safer for a puppy definitely he did go and he did go potty inside his, his home afterwards that is so interesting wow
Speaker 2I've never actually really heard of that yeah yeah, that's why you're here, so we can get all the, all the details, you know.
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah, puppies learn really fast, as you know. They learn so fast. So if he pottied on the pad, I probably told him good boy, go potty gave him a treat, like I usually do. Then I wonder what he thought when he went back home yeah, he's like well, like well.
Speaker 2I didn't go on the grass but I went on this and like yeah, that is very interesting. Thank you for sharing that.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2I love to write that one down yeah. You know, I've been here for so long Like that's, I've never heard of that. So yeah, definitely writing that down.
Speaker 4Yeah, it's interesting. I put myself around so many puppies or I bring them over to my house, because sometimes you're working on the business side of it and then you actually need to have the puppy in your house to see how it's like.
Speaker 2Totally Cool. Well yeah, like Gabe said, these are all just flowing into each other nicely. At what age should puppy potty training start, and how do you know it's working?
Speaker 4hmm, that's a good question. Um, my first answer is like, pretty much immediately, as soon as you come home with your puppy, you start training them. I mean, no matter if you're sitting there doing a session or you're not, you're always training your dog. And um, you have to ask yourself what's my situation? Where do I want my dog to go potty? Uh, there's so many factors that go into it. Um, most people, when they first come home, they're going to use a puppy pad or something like that. Hopefully they get a fresh patch. It makes it so much easier for them.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 4So you can constantly redirect your puppy over like pick them up, watch the signs that they have to go. You know that's pretty much half the battle, I would say, is familiarizing yourself with the signs. I could see it in my peripheral vision now. When a puppy needs to go potty, people call it out and they're like Taylor, how did you know that? And I'm like cause, that's like my job, dude.
Speaker 2Yeah, Got those instincts just like the dog. Now you know.
Speaker 4I'm like, oh, he's about to go potty. Everyone shut up, do not say a word, freeze.
Speaker 2That's so good. Oh, that's great.
Speaker 3That's awesome, um, okay, so kind of going back to the um, there's no bad dog sort of thing. Um, do you think that dogs are like, when they like misbehave it kind of? Kind of like what you were just talking about too. Um, with like going on the, the, the pee pads and how they peed inside yeah just generally speaking, like when dogs misbehave, um, do you feel like they're trying to communicate something and, in your experience, like what have you found that to be?
Speaker 4good question. Um so when it kind of goes back to the human baby thing, the human toddler, I don't think a baby, a human baby or human toddler can misbehave right they're so new in the world and we really have to if they're, we really have to monitor the environment and manage our environment and the early stages of puppyhood so that our puppy doesn't make bad decisions like you're.
Speaker 4Obviously you're not going to leave your $10,000 guitar on the floor with a new puppy around you know, of course like you're just obviously not going to do that, but, um, some people do, and then they the puppy, choose it up because it's a puppy, and then the people think that the dog's misbehaving, when in reality they're mislabeling the dog. Yeah, right, and that does nothing for us. It brings me back to okay, then what? Okay, I'm always taking the data and moving forward with it to make the dog better and better too. We're always we're learning about each other and, um, I always ask it's always a need. Yeah, if they're not misbehaving, it's a need that they don't have right now or they're not being met and it doesn't have to be so deep Like you're not meeting their needs ever.
Speaker 4No, maybe they just need a chew toy right now, and they've had one.
Speaker 2So yeah, it makes sense. Maybe don't leave your guitar out.
Speaker 4Yeah.
Speaker 2Learn from your own mistakes too. Oh, it's like's like. Okay, not the dog's fault, that was on me. Let's get it the chew toy and then, yeah, that that makes a lot of sense, so that's like right up your alley.
Speaker 3He's a guitar player, so yes, I have some expensive guitars and you said that it struck a chord with me a little bit awesome, um cool.
Speaker 2Well, that was a great answer, and um. So, moving on to how important is consistency in training, um, and how can busy owners stay consistent?
Speaker 4well, they can follow my page on tiktok there you go, shout it out again, yeah um, that's a good question. I would try to tie it back to something. How important is consistency? First of all, it's very important for a new puppy because we're setting our dog up to be secure in their mindset and we want them to know that their needs will be fulfilled so that they don't develop the bad habits like barking or whining or peeing inside the house or chewing up guitars, you know like it's not just the management, it's also the hold on.
Speaker 2Let me think I can get in depth with this question, that's the thing, of course, and I can tell the mind's flowing right now. I can tell the mind's flowing right now.
Speaker 4But at the same time, like no one has to be perfect here, right, like no one has to do things a hundred percent right all the time. And then, at the same time, your dog's always changing too. So I want to sit here and say, oh you, you got to be consistent in a perfect world, sure. I want to sit here and say, oh, you got to be consistent in a perfect world, sure, but as long as you're being creative and you're meeting your dog's needs and you get, you use tools that work with you. Fresh Patch works with you, brings you the grass. A good toy rotation keeps toys in. You know, you got to understand these tips. That's why, obviously, people are watching this video or looking up dog information online to learn more gotcha.
Speaker 3Yeah, absolutely, dogs are such creatures of habit, you know.
Speaker 4So, yeah, they are, they have an internal, like I might not articulate this perfectly, but dogs are different from us in the sense that they do have um an internal clock. So they we don't have that as much we do, but we don't um. Dogs are really relying on their environment to continually like give them what they need. Obviously yeah do you?
Speaker 2know, do you notice that in like different, like it's, that's more of a thing in certain breeds versus others? Because, like, we both have shepherds and my like obviously a very smart breed, you know, and my dog is just like you could tell. He has an internal clock, like and same with oliver. He's laying down right here but like like, for instance, every day like three o'clock hits. Both of them are like take me home.
Speaker 2Take me home, I'm done you know, yeah, like they start whining more and they're just like kind of leading us towards their leash.
Speaker 3They're standing by the door and it's every day, every day about the same time, and it's like okay, they're done, like I have like all these snapchats on my phone because we feed oliver at seven o'clock every day, so I have all these snapchats on my phone of him coming right up my face seven o'clock on the dot, like he knows exactly when that is like he's he's supposed to be fed.
Speaker 4Whoa, that's so cool. I love that you have figured that out about your dog. How old are they?
Speaker 2Mine is eight.
Speaker 3Yeah, oliver's about to turn 11, actually, yeah, so he's getting up there, but he's still healthy at heart.
Speaker 2Really interesting too, because I just got mine a year and a half ago. We started off as fostering and then ended up adopting him. So to we started off as fostering and then ended up adopting him, so to see his progression and he's same way, like abe said, like he's on the dot five, we see feed him at 5, 30 at. He's on the dot every time like ready nose, and I'm like, is it the sun? Like like, because when the time change did happen, he was, he was a little off, but then he got, he got back on track. So I don't know, just just yeah, very interesting. They're very, I mean, we love shepherds, so just a very smart breed. But I wonder if that translate like if that's the same with every dog, or you know no, I love that you brought that up, because the puppies don't quite have that yet, right?
Speaker 4That's why I talk so much about routine, a puppy routine, a puppy schedule, something predictable that your puppy can start to predict. And if they know they're going to go outside at a certain time, then they might not pee in the house. Right, because they have the impulse control and then you've done it like the same every day for weeks on end. So your puppy's under they're learning that right there. That's what builds a secure dog, because if the dog has needs that aren't being met, I mean, think like a it's kind of sad, but think of a child who is in the foster care system where their needs are not really, they're inconsistent, and how much work that takes as an adult to work through. I mean, and it just it happens to dogs too. Just because they can't talk doesn't mean that that's not happening. So the more predictable you can be, the better for your dog long-term. Yeah.
Speaker 2Makes total sense.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 2Yeah, like I said, a year and a half we've had them and it's been the same schedule for that year and a half, like we started immediately. We have not switched it and he's locked in and I know you've had all over forever. So, yeah, it's been about the same thing.
Speaker 4so, yeah, oh, absolutely yeah, it's better for your, it's better for the dogs who came from the shelter to have that schedule.
Speaker 3It's even more important, yeah definitely um cool, so let's, let's move on here.
Speaker 2Sorry, once yeah, we got a few minutes left. We got a timer on here, so, oh, okay, wrap it up go quickly, okay.
Tips for Apartment Dog Owners
Speaker 3So for people, this one's for, like, people who are living in apartments, um, without yards, um, you know, very big part of like our demographic. So what are some tips that you have for keeping their dogs happy and healthy?
Speaker 4um, good question. So I myself have lived in apartments my whole life, um, and I train puppies here, and I have my own dog here who's seven years old, um, so your dog can live a very fulfilling life without having a yard. I mean, there's so many alternatives nowadays. I mean you can rent a backyard. It's an app called sniff spot. Really, I've done it before with a pool sometimes too, oh right, for the summer it's great.
Speaker 4Um, you could just take your dog on a walk outside instead of throwing them in the backyard, which really does nothing for them. Put them on a leash and take them on a walk around the block. Even people who have backyards do this every single day, of course, because that's where they know that's where their dog gets the most exercise yeah, yes obviously it's the summer, we have to exercise some caution here.
Speaker 4So anything water related, anything inside a store, maybe pet smart or lowe's home depot. I think even sephora and lush have like pet friendly rules, oh wow yeah, there you go.
Speaker 2So for all the ladies out there, you know you're going to get your stuff.
Speaker 3I think even Sephora and Lush have pet-friendly rules. Oh wow, there you go. So for all the ladies out there, you're going to get your stuff. You're there for yourself, yeah, and helping out your dog and playing tag Two birds one stone.
Speaker 4Yeah, get a bath bomb and take your dog.
Speaker 2Yeah, I love it. We need to have doggy bath bombs now we need to reach out to. Sephora yeah, we need to have doggy bath bombs now we need to reach out to support, yeah, dog, safe bath bombs. I like that, I know right, yeah, cool, well, yeah, thank you. And, like I said to wrap things up, we always ask this question to all our guests. This one for you is a little more tailored to what you do, but do you have a favorite success story from your training experience?
Speaker 4oh, good question, gosh. It's been a while since I did a like one-on-one training with somebody for like a long term, because right now it's mostly focused making content Right. So to make my answer kind of fit that mold, it's when people like I post content every day and it's usually relating to puppies, but people who had watched my content when they had puppies and they come back and they DM me or they tell me that you know, someone just told me I had the most well behaved dog ever and it's because of your videos. That just like warms my heart. Those are like the best like things to get ever yeah, right.
Speaker 2So reassuring. It makes you feel you know, remind yourself that you're doing something right you're like, this is why I'm doing this.
Speaker 3Yeah, you know, yeah, that's cool yeah no, they don't know secretly.
Speaker 4I just can't shut up about dogs.
Speaker 2You made a career about it, you know that's awesome, very cool.
Speaker 3I think we have a similar problem here, yeah.
Speaker 2Honestly.
Speaker 4Yes.
Speaker 2I love dogs you know so well. Very cool, and thank you so much for joining. I know we're running out of time a little bit, but if you want to take this chance to shout out your social media again, let everyone know where they can find you, how they can get your training guides, Please have the floor.
Speaker 4Cool yeah. Like I said, I'm on TikTok and Instagram and YouTube under my name Taylor Saison. You can look up Taylor and dog training. It'll help my SEO and you'll find some videos and from there, if you like my style of training, I also sell like a digital book. Basically it's a 50 page book of positive dog training tips and it's available in my bio or you can Google it.
Speaker 2Awesome. So, yeah, all you viewers, listeners, check her out. She is fantastic, one of our best partners here at Fresh Patch. We love working with you and promoting Fresh Patch to your followers as well, so really appreciate it and a shout out for us as well. If you are listening wherever you're listening to your podcast, you can find the Potty Talk podcast. Go ahead and follow at Fresh Patch on all social media and check out freshpatchcom If you are interested in. You know, maybe you are getting a puppy soon and you are starting the potty training process. Real Grass right to your door. Check it out freshpatchcom.
Speaker 1Thanks for listening to the Potty Time podcast brought to you by Fresh Patch. We hope you enjoyed the show. Give us a like or a follow, or shop all of our real grass supplies at freshpatchcom.