Diona The Trainer

Free guide · Diona The Trainer

To Dog Or
Not To Dog

Ten honest chapters on what dog ownership actually involves, before you decide. Written by a trainer with fifteen years across zoo, wildlife, and private dog work.

✓ What a good dog actually looks like ✓ Why "bad" dogs aren't bad ✓ Real costs (with my actual monthly numbers) ✓ How to choose the right breed ✓ The four modes that structure a dog's day

Diona The Trainer

To Dog Or Not To Dog

Ten short chapters to help you make the decision of a lifetime

Diona Chu

BVSc · MEd · Melbourne

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What's in the guide

Chapter one

What's a good dog?

Obedience and good behaviour are not the same thing. A good dog makes good decisions without being told. The one you actually want is the result of a well-organised life, not constant instruction.

Chapter two

There are no bad dogs

What's really happening when a dog is labelled difficult or reactive, and the six things that raise a dog's waterline before any trigger arrives.

Chapter three

Is now the right time?

A clear-eyed look at work schedule, household consistency, life season, and stability. What you're actually bringing the dog into, before you commit.

Chapter four

The time reality

How much time dog ownership actually takes, day to day. What a puppy's first year demands, and why the routine holds because you hold it, not because the dog asks for it.

Chapter five

What it actually costs

Real monthly numbers for a 30kg Labrador. Initial costs, the training budget most people skip, what a vet emergency actually runs, and the ongoing costs nobody budgets for.

Chapter six

Choosing the right breed

Most people choose based on appearance, not on what the breed was built to do. The questions worth answering before you decide. Plus an honest word on rescues.

Chapter seven

How to build the good dog

The PACE framework: PLAY, ANCHOR, CALM, EXPLORE. What actually produces a good dog is reading the waterline and running the day with structure. Commands are a small part of it.

Chapter eight

The long commitment

A dog lives ten to fifteen years through everything: career changes, moves, children, loss. Senior dogs, end-of-life decisions, and what it means to treat a dog as a relationship rather than a pet.

Chapter nine

Not ready yet?

Dog-sitting, fostering, and shelter volunteering as genuine alternatives. There's no right time that announces itself, but most people know honestly whether the conditions are close to right or not.

Chapter ten

What comes next

If you've decided to go ahead, setup matters more than early training. Most puppy problems are setup problems. What to do before day one so the first year looks different from the one people figure out as they go.

Diona Chu, dog trainer Melbourne

About Diona

I'm a Melbourne-based dog trainer with a degree in veterinary science, a Masters in Early Childhood Education, and fifteen years across zoo, wildlife, and private dog training. My assistance dog Murphy and I work with clients across Melbourne and online.

I wrote this guide because the problems that bring most people to me were preventable. A better decision before the dog comes home makes everything that follows easier.