Peyton Performance Dogs

Training Services

Foundation and Relationship Building

Foundation work is the ground work you will need to get started in agility. This class could be for the person that wants to compete with their dog or for someone that wants to work on relationship building with their dog.

Rally classes will be offered in the near future for the person looking to compete in this sport along with nose work classes.

Conformation classes are offered for people looking for information on how to present their dogs in the show ring.

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Competitive Obedience

We offer competitive obedience for the person interested in competing with their dog however, obedience classes are also offered for the person looking for help with everyday manners.

Competitive Agility

For the dog who has some foundation training and strong enough verbal control that they can successfully work off-leash. Dogs will continue their training and will also be introduced to all remaining pieces of equipment.

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Find a Training Session

Check Now!

Take a look at our many diversified and multi-skilled trainers below and select the one that best fits with your dogs specific needs. Then simply email them to schedule your first training session.

Our Trainers

Our trainers are dedicated to providing quality solutions to fit the needs of our clients and their dogs. Training will help teach your dog proper obedience, agility and conformation skills as well as specialized training techniques.

  • Mary Dougherty

    Phone: 719-354-7932
    Email: maryagile@gmail.com

    I began my journey with agility in the year 2000 on the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska. My husband and I lived in Alaska for 30 years. We moved to Seldovia, Alaska with our family the summer of 1980, a fishing village that could only be accessed by ferry or small airplanes. We had many new experiences coming from the flat farming land of North Dakota to mountains and the ocean and great fishing. We lived in Seldovia for six years and then moved to the main peninsula. We were both school teachers and our jobs and our three daughters kept us very busy until our daughters started graduating from high school and it was at that time that my canine competitive journey began.

    The breed I chose to be part of our family in Alaska was the Bouvier des Flanders. There were a couple of breeders in Alaska and what I had researched about them they would be great family Alaskan dogs. I was correct. We ended up with three female Bouviers. Not long after welcoming them in our home I started participating in conformation, tracking, and obedience. Agility finally arrived in Alaska and I added that to my list plus rally. It was a time when dog training evolved and clicker training and positive training was the new trend. Thank goodness that is how I started and what I learned from and continued when training any of my dogs. Our oldest Bouvier, Denali, ended up earning the AKC VCD1 title, the second Bouvier in the country to earn this versatile title. Denali was also invited to the first AKC Agility Invitational that was held in California. We did attend. Denali was a great role model for the breed. All three of our Bouviers did do conformation, obedience, tracking and rally.

    Next to join our family in Alaska was a border collie named Trek. Trek was brilliant and fast. Trek also did multiple canine events, but what I fell in love with most was agility, so when possible I spent my time there. I actually traveled out to the west coast a couple of times a year as there were not many agility competitions in Alaska at that time. Trek was High in Trial twice in agility at the Rose City Classic. When we moved to Colorado we added USDAA as one of our other agility venues along with AKC. Since there were so many agility trials, I made agility my main focus. Trek ended up in the finals of multiple regional events winning several of them and in the national finals of USDAA and AKC. His highest placing was 4th place. Trek and I also traveled to AKC world team tryouts several times. We never made the AKC world team, but I never gave up and learned a lot about mental management, toughness, not giving up the dream and continued to push my skills to get better and better.

    My love for different breeds continued as Jade, a Belgian Tervuren, joined our family as we left Alaska. Jade qualified for several Cynosport events. Jade taught me a lot about expanding my handling skills, as what worked for my border collie, Trek, didn’t always work for Jade. Jade taught me about blind crosses as she did like me out front and that was the only way I could do that. Jade did not have a high Q rate, but she loved agility, so she taught me to look at the good parts of each run and to celebrate those successes.

    Now I currently own All American Smarti Marti, a little black streak that brought me to new adventures. Marti and I became part of three USDAA world teams. We traveled to Italy and the Netherlands. Our third trip did not take place as covid hit that spring and teams have not traveled since. Marti is also a national champion with USDAA in the Steeplechase and the Biathlon event. My youngster is a Mudi, a breed just recognized by the AKC. Mudi Blu was invited to the AKC Invitational in 2021 and he won the hybrid event and took second place in two other events. Both Marti and Blu have qualified for the 2022 AKC agility nationals. All my dogs have taught me many things. Some loved repetition, some said “ I got it after a couple of tries.” I feel strongly that the relationship with your dog is the most important thing you can do and build on from the time they enter your home. The relationship gives you that long term team work with your dog and it helps build that they want to be with you in training and trials. They can handle redoing an obstacle or drill because you have taught them it is fun and they trust you. I believe in letting your dog fly and the handler needs to figure out how to keep up. I am an eclectic handler. I find what works for each individual dog and use that skill to get the best out of our team.

  • Kim McNeill

    Email: kdmbasenji@hotmail.com

    Kim McNeill has had dogs her entire life, but her first competition dog, her second basenji, came into her life in 1997.  It was only a short time later that she fell in love with doing agility with her basenjis. That basenji ended up achieving over 30 titles in multiple sports. After titling a couple of basenjis, she acquired a malinois from Malinois Rescue and trained her to master levels in agility.

    Kim enjoys the challenge that independent thinkers give her and her training methods reflect the importance of flexibility and thinking outside the box.  She has titled multiple dogs, mostly sighthounds, in different dog sports including conformation, coursing, rally, freestyle, therapy work, barnhunt and of course agility.   Her current pack includes one basenji (retired), a malinois and 2 silken windhounds. When she’s not spending time with dogs, she can be found in her quilting studio, often quilting dogs.

     

    Kim McNeill & the dogs with the tell-tale tails

    one fiesty redheaded curly tailed princess:

    Zest! Ch, SC, MX, MXJ, NAP, OF, TDIA, RATO, W-FD, W-TFD

    the non curly tails:  delightful Devon (UKC Ch, UAGI, NAC, OJC, NCC, TG-N),  and

    spicy Spy-C

    and of course Digital the brindlewonderkid now in the great beyond- mBiF, group winning, AKC Dual Ch (FC, Ch), RN, SC, MX, MXJ, OAP, AJP, EAC, EJC, OGC, AD, ASFA FCh, TDIAOV, MVB, 2002/2007 #1 agility basenji (AKC rankings)

     

    Jet the tri-ing  – Ch, SC, AX, AXJ, RN, ASFA FCh, NAC, NJC, CGC, TDIA, MVB also in the great beyond

    www.falconagility.com
    Colorado Springs, CO

    “They paved paradise to put up a parking lot” – Joni Mitchell

  • Bette Green

    Phone: 719-641-1863
    Email: betoes24@cs.com

    Bette Green is the owner of Peyton Performance Dogs. She has been involved in dogs for 30 years and has put Agility, Obedience and Conformation titles on multiple dogs. She also founded and continues to run the Old English Sheepdog Rescue of Colorado for the last 20 years.

    Bette has been teaching Competition Agility along with Foundation classes for the last 5 years. She loves the positive training and letting the dogs think for themselves. Bette also enjoys seeing the progress in the dogs and handlers! Owning her own training center has been a dream for many years, not only for the teaching aspect but a place that she could use for fundraising for OES Rescue. There were many people involved in making this come true.

    Bette currently shares her home with three Old English Sheepdogs,  Layla is 11, Thatcher is 8 and Crystal is 1 year.  Her contact information is  betoes24@cs.com  719-641-1863

  • Shelley Bergstraser

    Phone: 719-641-6727
    Email: wildwindcollies@elpasotel.net

    I started working as an apprentice trainer in 1984. I have been a Collie Breeder since 1984 as well. Through the years I have bred, trained and trialed some of the top Conformation Champion, Herding, Obedience and Agility Collies in the Country-some of the most titled dogs in our breed.  We have bred, as of May of 2019, 77 Homebred Champions and I have titled Collies to UDX2’s, AX, AXJ, Herding Champion (a Dual Champion, Conformation and Herding Champion) and Rally Advanced Excellent and have homebred OTCH and Tracking Champion dogs with happy owners across the country.  I am the past owner/head trainer from Canine Solutions Dog Training Center. In all areas of instruction our training center mission was to ALWAYS focus on positive training techniques and for all instructors to stay up to date on the very best training methods. I reinforce with food and toy/play training in obedience and teach proper correction for bad behavior while rewarding what we want to see.

    Although I have instructed students in every venue I trial in, I consider Obedience to be my specialty and I have helped countless students to not only make their dogs their best companions EVER, I have helped many to achieve titles from Novice Obedience to Obedience Trial Champions. One of my greatest joys as a trainer is to help the Beginner students who are struggling with their dog’s poor behavior to train their dogs to be fabulous pals and wonderful companions in their homes and their lives. I love to see the relationship build from one of helplessness and losing hope to one of joy, bonding and true companionship between people and their dogs.

  • Beth Howland

    Phone: 719-310-6282
    Email: goldensrgreat@earthlink.net

    I think of Obedience and Agility as an orchestrated “dance”.  I want my canine partner to be a willing participant in working with me and I achieve this desire by keeping my dogs engaged through connection games.  I have been teaching competitive Obedience since 2012 and competitive Agility since 2016.  As an instructor, I feel I must actively compete at the level I instruct.  In Obedience, I have obtained titles through Utility.  I have acquired three MACHS and one PACH in Agility.

    My training philosophy is simple.  I want my dogs to learn to think about what they are being rewarded for.  It’s all about choice!  I use shaping techniques to reward the behavior I desire.  A wrong choice creates a “try again”, resulting in delayed reinforcement.  Each skill or exercise taught is broken down into various pieces.  Each piece is learned separately, then incrementally chained together to form an exercise.  My dogs are happy!

    Over the years, I have earned multiple “High In Trial” awards in both Obedience and Agility.   Between two dogs, I have qualified for the AKC Agility Nationals for the past six years and have attend four.  At the 2014 Agility Nationals, I ranked 13th out of 88 dogs, in the 24″ division, and was the #2 ranked Golden Retriever.  In 2018, at the Golden Retriever Club of America (GRCA) National Specialty, I won the 24″ Master Agility Standard class and placed 2nd in Master FAST.  In Obedience, at the 2018 GRCA National Specialty, I won the Graduate Open class and placed 15th out of 48 dogs in the Open B class.

  • Sara Karl

    Phone: 719-660-0518
    Email: karl3106@comcast.net

    I have been breeding and showing Bernese Mountain Dogs for 30 years and judging multiple breeds and Junior Showmanship since 2007. I have finished many of my own dogs and client dogs over the years as well as putting  multiple group placements on them. I also also participate in, Herding and Obedience and Drafting.  I enjoy teaching Conformation and showing people how to present their dogs better.

  • Megan Lundberg

    Phone: 719-396-4390
    Email: meg.lundberg@gmail.com

    Megan Lundberg CPDT-KA began dog training in 2012 in San Diego, CA where her husband was stationed in the Navy. Plans of pursuing her lifelong dream of becoming a veterinarian changed when she discovered her interest in behavior while studying at Colorado State University. This combined love of dogs with newfound passion for learning about behavior lead to the path of dog training. She currently works primarily at Canine Coach, Inc. teaching group classes, Puppy Day School, Adolescent Day School, and private lessons and specialized services like Family Paws / dog and kid safety, and reactive dog class. She has her own business, The Mannerly Mutt LLC, to offer private lessons and dryland mushing.

    Megan began taking agility classes locally in 2010 with her first dog ever, Denali, a Siberian husky. She now has two Siberians and a young Silken Windhound in classes, and has competed in AKC and NADAC regularly. She also had a senior rescue 2-legged toy poodle, Amaze-Bobb, who did classes for a year with the approval of his physical therapy team.

Our Other Services

Other services that do not fall in the training category but do other great things for your dog.