Ricky
-This affectionate, intelligent young husky is the full package: energetic, eager to learn, and overflowing with potential. He bonds quickly with calm, confident handlers and thrives in a home that offers routine, consistency, and clear expectations. He’s not a “difficult” dog—he’s a high‑arousal adolescent still mastering impulse control, and he
wants
to succeed. In just a few days, he’s already shown impressive improvement.
Crate Proficiency:
He settles beautifully in his crate and sleeps comfortably for several hours. Initially he preferred the crate fully covered, but now handles partial visibility well and rarely reacts to other dogs. He uses the crate appropriately for rest and decompression, enjoys meals and enrichment inside, and quiet behavior is reinforced with calm treat delivery. Brief attention‑seeking vocalizations fade quickly when ignored.
House Manners:
He has had
no accidents
indoors and can comfortably hold his bladder overnight for about eight hours. After activity, he often chooses to rest and loves leaning in for affection or rolling over for belly rubs.
Leash Skills:
His leash progress has been rapid. With a front‑clip harness and a stop‑and‑wait protocol, his pulling has decreased significantly. He’s spending more time walking and less time stopping, beginning to check in with his handler, and recovering from distractions more quickly each day.
Reactivity:
He is currently highly aroused by cats, small running dogs, fast movement, and running children. His reactions may include staring, lunging, vocalizing, and strong pulling. Once distance is created, he recovers well—he simply needs time to decompress before continuing.
Food & Reward Motivation:
Food motivation is stronger than expected. He loves slow feeders, lick mats, treat balls, training treats, and string cheese as a high‑value reward. He enjoys working for his food through enrichment and training rather than eating from a bowl.
Toys & Play:
Toy drive is high. Tug, fetch, and water play are favorites. Tug should be limited to designated toys to protect leash manners. Structured tug will become a powerful training reward once he fully understands start/stop cues.
Training Progress:
Clicker training has been introduced and he’s thriving. Short, successful sessions (about three minutes) keep him engaged and prevent over‑arousal. He’s currently reinforcing his name, recall, sit, and down—and he learns quickly.
Dog Interactions:
Introductions are ongoing. He shows positive interest through a crate but can become intense when entering another dog’s space. He has displayed stiff posture and direct staring, and benefits from slow, structured introductions with experienced handlers. Parallel walking is recommended before direct interaction.
Ideal Home:
He will shine with a
n active owner familiar with northern breeds or high‑drive dogs.
Someone committed to ongoing training and structure.
Daily physical exercise and mental enrichment and c
lear routines and consistent expectations
Not recommended at this time for homes with cats, small prey animals, or small children until his impulse control continues to improve.
Biggest Strengths
Exceptionally intelligent
Learns fast
Affectionate with trusted people
Recovers from excitement better each day
Enjoys training
Highly toy and food motivated
Accepts structure readily
Outstanding potential with consistent handling