
Caroline Haldeman started training dogs 20 years ago, when she
volunteered her time helping train police bloodhounds in Orange County,
CA. Today, her passion is breeding and training German Shepherds for
protection and detection work. Caroline is the Owner and Training Director
of Sirius K9 Academy in Yorba Linda, located in Orange County, CA. She
started this business 5 years ago, wanting to offer the public something
more then just your standard every-day obedience training.
Caroline is a graduate from the School of Animal Science
in Atlanta, GA, where she excelled in the Pro-Animal Care Specialist
program. After completing the program, Caroline worked as a Veterinary
Technician at a large veterinary hospital in Oklahoma for three years.
Caroline is also a graduate from the Tom Rose School of Dog Training
in St. Louis, MO, the most prestigious school of its kind in the United
States. She obtained her Pro-Expert Dog Trainer certification in 1992
specializing in protection, police, and narcotics detection dogs. While
in St. Louis, Caroline also enjoyed competing in Schutzhund trials,
and even certified as a DVG-agitator. She volunteered her time training
dogs for Support Dogs, Inc., an organization devoted to helping the
physically handicapped, as well as trained and handled dogs for the
Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program at local schools. Caroline’s
favorite past time however while in St. Louis, was training and handling
K9s to find narcotics inside homes and businesses for Scentry Consulting,
Inc.
Caroline is very passionate about the work that she does.
She is a huge advocate of educating the owner and the public. Although
she is strict, her methods are fun and rewarding. She teaches you how
to get your dog to listen to you out of respect, not fear. Caroline
really encourages her clients to find their dog a JOB! She also emphasizes
the importance of proper nutrition and healthy weight for our pets.
Some of Caroline’s crusades include keeping dogs on-leash when
in public, not over-vaccinating your dog, restraining dogs safely in
vehicles, raising your puppy correctly, and educating owners on when
and when not to breed their dog. She specializes in aggressive dogs
and German Shepherds, but has a lot of experience with all breeds,
including many rare breeds.
During the past 16 years, Caroline has instructed hundreds of group
classes, and private lessons as well as seminars in K9 obedience, protection,
the remote collar, K9 safety, decoy and detection work. She has attended
numerous seminars on protection, detection, and police K9 training
around the country. She has also presented numerous K9 demonstrations
with impressive results. Caroline is an Expert Witness and consultant
for several insurance agencies, attorneys, as well as for a city in
Orange County, CA. She is also an evaluator for local animal shelters
and works with several rescue organizations offering free training
to their dogs to help make the dogs more adoptable.
Caroline’s experience also includes being an instructor at Pro-Train
in San Diego, where she assisted in certifying students from across
the nation to be professional dog trainers. She was also the lead trainer
and a handler for one of the largest security K9 companies in Southern
California. She was among the first to implement strict training guidelines
for working security K9s in the United States. Caroline and her dog
Kilo were one of only three K9 teams in California requested and used
for a union strike lock-out in Ohio and proved to be an outstanding
team. Caroline retired as the Training Director for the Orange County
Working Dog Association (OCWDA) in 2003. She was the Founder and Training
Director for four years and instructed over one hundred handlers in
advanced protection K9 training and obedience. Caroline has also been
featured in several newspaper and magazine articles (including a magazine
in Japan) regarding her experience and knowledge training dogs.
In
her past time, she enjoys her own dogs named “Kilo”,
a 14-year old, male German Shepherd she trained for police work & narcotic
detection, and “Radar”, a 9-year old, male German Shepherd
she trained for personal protection work. Caroline also enjoys competing
with her dogs. When she competed with Kilo & Radar, who are now
too old to compete, she competed in the National Association of Protection
Dogs (NAPD) and the International Protection Dog League (IPDL). She has
been in the top three at every competition she has entered, including
three first place awards in the last three trials she entered. Additionally,
Caroline and Kilo were the highest scoring team at the IPDL trial held
in June 2001 and received the Decoy’s Choice Award at the NAPD
trial held in August 2000.
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