Retford Times

Sarah takes lead in race for top animal trainer

SHE’S IN THE FINALS FOR PRESTIGIOU­S STAR AWARDS

- By LAYCIE BECK laycie.beck@reachplc.com

THEY say dogs are our best friends.

But for some, dogs are far more than that.

From detection dogs to assistance dogs, some of them are quite literally lifesavers.

It takes hours of hard work and dedication from trainers across the country to make them far more than just company.

Sarah Whitele has helped train thousands of animals and is now a finalist in the Animal Star Awards for her business Boots and Paws, which she has been running for a decade.

Sarah, of Oldcotes, near Worksop, started out as a dog walker and then decided to learn more about training. She now helps dogs become assistance animals.

She said: “I’ve been training assistance dogs for people with mental health problems, mainly post-traumatic stress disorder.

“I’m training a couple of dogs at the moment for two women who have autism as well as other medical conditions and an anxiety disorder.

“I have also just taken a position with Darwin Dogs UK, which is an assistance dog company that works with Assistance Dogs UK.”

She added: “I’m training up Dave, who is my dog, and I’m training him up to be an assistance dog for anxiety, as I suffer with anxiety but dog training helps me through it.”

Sarah said that she decided she wanted to learn more about training after she took on a rescue dog “with a few issues”.

“I wanted to help her but I wasn’t sure how to go about it. I found some online study courses and ended up studying for a few years and read all these books and did practical courses.”

Someone then contacted Sarah to ask if she could help their dog with lead pulling and from 2015 she started offering obedience training before going into the behavioura­l side as well.

Sarah has won multiple awards, such as with the Pet Products and Services Awards and also the Corporate LiveWire Global Awards.

She has recently been announced as a finalist in the 2024 Animal Star Awards for the dog trainer and behaviouri­st of the year category.

When asked how she felt to become a finalist, she replied: “I was shocked. I didn’t know that I had been nominated at first and then I got the notificati­on and thought that would be it. “Then I got the message about a month or so later saying I was a finalist and I couldn’t believe it.”

Regarding her business, she continued: “I specialise in aggression and reactivity in dogs as well as anxiety issues. “I also train assistance dogs to help people who suffer from PTSD and suffer from mental health. “I am currently training an assistance dog for someone who suffers from really bad anxiety and suffers bad panic attacks and having an assistance dog has made her life so much easier.

“I am also training my own dog Dave to be an assistance dog to help me due to myself having PTSD and disabiliti­es.”

She added: “I love what I do and love to help people.

“I have spent a few years studying to get where I am today and every day is a school day, if I am not training then I am studying or writing courses and blogs.

“I have studied and attended various different courses and gained many different qualificat­ions and levels.”

I love what I do and love to help people. I didn’t know that I had been nominated at first

Sarah Whitele

 ?? ?? Sarah with her 10-yearold rescue Belgian Malinois Pip
Sarah with her 10-yearold rescue Belgian Malinois Pip

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