Military dogs want the same things people want when they retire: comfort, some peace and quiet, and quality time with their loved ones.

That’s not too much to ask for a pup who served their country, now is it?

While 90% of canine veterans end up with their handlers, a few end up available for adoption.

Air Force officials at Lackland Air Force Base, the San Antonio base are worried over the sharp disinterest faced by the retired military working dogs post-retirement.

While the trainee puppies who don’t make the cut for active duty are readily adopted, the older K9s yearn for a home but keep getting overlooked.

Source: Demetrius Lester/Wikimedia Commons | Senior Airman William O’Brien/Wikimedia Commons

The officials have now turned to the people for help. They have requested potential adoptive parties to consider retired K9s too.

These hardworking K9s have dedicated their lives to the safety of the nation and its people. They will be assets to their new family in every aspect.

Source: PxHere | State Farm/Flickr

Lackland Air Force Base, the San Antonio base where all military pups receive their training, handles all their own adoptions, as does the Transportation Security Administration.

There are also organizations like Mission K9 Rescue, which help facilitate adoptions of contract military working dogs, which are often harder to reunite with their handlers.

You can expect most retired military working dogs (MWDs) available for adoption to be between the ages of 10 and 12.

Common breeds include German shepherds, Labrador retrievers and Belgian malinois—all loyal, energetic and intelligent.

“Every MWD, when they’re retiring, they do a behavioral test and an adoption test to make sure they’re not going to be food aggressive or bite a small child or chase the mailman down the street,” says MAC Chief Petty Officer Jason Silvis, who works with MWDs at Lackland Air Force Base.

“We do a wide variety of tests before we decide that the dogs are good to be adopted to the public.”

Of the dogs that end up back at Lackland, 75% are approved for adoption. At any given time, there can be as many as 200 approved adopters on their waitlist.

According to Silvis, there are a few requirements that have to be met before you can get your paws on a MWD:

A family has to apply and be interviewed by the military to ensure it will provide for the dog and to answer questions about other pets in the home.

A family usually cannot have young children. Unfortunately, most of the dogs aren’t good fits for families with kids under age 5.

A family must be willing to travel to San Antonio to get the dog.

Lackland only places about six dogs a month, but like Mama always says, good things come to those who wait.

Interested in adopting a retired military working dog? Contact the officers at [email protected] or call 210-671-6766. Visit Lackland Air Force Base’s website for more info.

Please spread the word and help increase the chances of adoptions for our loyal K9 veterans.

Click the video below to watch how amazing K9 veterans are and how you can adopt them!

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Basics of Dog Training

It’s essential for Dog parents like you to know certain basic factors that determine your relationship with your Dog and can go a long way in training him effectively.

Before you begin training your Dog, it is absolutely essential that you build a loving bond with him. This is important as it helps you to understand his needs and instincts and also allows your Dog to have complete trust in you.

Know more about Dog care from this free mini course

Let us see how…….

How To Bond With Your Dog

Building a bond with your Dog is the first and the most crucial step involved in training him successfully. As soon as you bring your Dog home, you must first try to develop a caring and loving relationship with him in order to win his trust and confidence.

When Dogs are secure in the knowledge that they belong to the family, they are more likely to respond better to their owners’ training commands. Just like with any relationship, there must be mutual trust and respect between you and your Dog.

Trust takes time to develop and respect comes from defining boundaries and treating any breach of those boundaries with firmness and fairness.

Without enforceable limitations, respect can’t be developed. And when there is no respect, building a bond with your Dog is almost impossible.

4 Golden Rules To Building A Relationship With Your Dog :

Spend quality time together; Take him out in the world and experience life together; Establish and promote a level of mutual respect; and Develop a way of communicating to understand each other’s needs. Building a bond with your Dog will not only help you manage him better but will also make your Dog calm, quiet and an extremely well-adjusted pet.

Love Your Dog and He Will Love You back

Once you’re succesful in building a bond with your Dog, you can rest assured that training him and teaching him new and clever tricks will be a cakewalk.

Learn how to bond with your Dog with this free mini course.

How Your Dog Learns…

Your Dog’s learning period can be divided into five phases:

The Teaching Phase – This is the phase where you must physically demonstrate to your Dog exactly what you want him to do.

The Practicing Phase – Practice makes Perfect. Once a lesson is learnt, practice with your Dog what you have just taught him.

The Generalizing Phase – Here you must continue practicing with your Dog in different locations and in an environment with a few distractions. You can take your Dog out for a walk, or to a nearby park and command him to practice whatever you’ve taught him.

Practicing the learned lessons in multiple locations and in the presence of small distractions will help him learn and retain lessons better .

The Testing Phase – Once you’re sure that your Dog has achieved almost 90% success….he responds correctly almost every time you give a command, you must start testing his accuracy in newer locations with a lot of distractions.

Example: Take him to the local shopping mall and ask him to obey your command. He may not come up with the correct response the very first time you do this, but you must not lose hope.

The idea is to test your Dog to see how he responds in an environment which is new to him. Set-up a situation where you are in control of the environment and your Dog.

There are only 2 possibilities:

Your Dog succeeds!!! (Trumpets please!) In case your Dog fails, re-examine the situation. Review and/or change your training. Then try testing again.

Keep on testing until he succeeds. Follow the rule of the 3 Ps – patience, persistence, praise.

Internalizing Phase – Finally, comes the extremely rewarding phase where your Dog does everything he is taught to do even without your commands.

Remember: