The student news site of Bellaire High School

Wolf’s pack members

April 14, 2022

“Once I saw how much energy Viola had and how much she loved playing with other dogs, I knew she needed a companion,” Wolf said. “I added my third dog Pearl to the pack with the intention to show her in conformation — the beauty pageant part of dog shows. And I also explored breeding — I ended up breeding Viola and keeping two of her puppies.”

Wolf’s dogs are all Pendleton Australian Shepherds. As each dog joined the family, they entered the world of competition as well. Wolf said the dogs learned well from each other and naturally picked up behaviors and tricks. With six dogs in the house, there was always something happening and something to be done.

“Having a pack of dogs is constant entertainment; there was always shenanigans and playing and being silly,” Wolf said. “There were some things that I had regimens for and the dogs understood them. At feeding time, each of the six knew where their spot was and knew to wait until I gave them a release command before they could eat.”

Juggling teaching and dog training got hectic at times for Wolf. He would come home from school and load his dogs up to head out to the training field, where he attended training classes from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

“Teaching in and of itself is always stressful, but having the dog training was very cathartic and a way to get some distance so that I wasn’t doing school things 24/7,” Wolf said. “I think the more I trained dogs, the more I understood a lot of things about myself in terms of teaching as well.”

No one loved seeing the dogs more than Wolf’s grandmother.

“She would get so excited every time we’d win something,” Wolf said. “This was at the point where she was in assisted living and in nursing home care. She was in the early stages of dementia, and the two things that she would keep track of were the Houston Astros and what was going on with the dogs. Other things, not so much.”

Huddled in the backyard, Brian Wolf herds four of his Australian Shepherds into getting picture ready. Behind the camera, two more dogs wait patiently. (Photo provided by Brian Wolf)

Just like with the pack, in a classroom, Wolf is constantly aware of how his interactions and responses can influence what’s going on with his students.

“You have to think about how every single second you’re reinforcing something,” Wolf said. “You’re making it more or less likely that something’s going to happen depending on what you’re doing.”

With many successes under their belt, Wolf and his pack’s competition journey came to a close 10 years ago. He shifted his concentration away from competition and onto teaching and other parts of his daily life.

“I felt like we had reached our goal and that I didn’t need to spend every weekend at a dog show working on another title,” Wolf said. “Another factor was that I had a hip surgery, so I wasn’t able to compete for a while.”

During a year of unfamiliarity in 2020, dogs remained a constant in his life. After the passing of the last dog in his pack in October 2019, Wolf welcomed home a new Australian Shepherd puppy in March. His new puppy, Deacon, had only settled in for a few months when he got a call from the same breeder in September.

“The breeder reached out to me because another puppy from the same litter had gone to a home where they really were not able to give him what he needed,” Wolf said. “There was just no one who was able to give him the time. The breeder asked me if I would be willing to take him, and I said absolutely.”

Building a bond with the second puppy took a lot of time and patience due to the lack of socialization at his previous home.

“Knox didn’t have a primary person or relationship before, so he almost immediately attached himself to me, seeing that I was interacting and wanting to work with him,” Wolf said. “He’s a little more velcro than the other one. He has come a long way.”

Wolf planned to start training the new puppies, but things didn’t go as planned.

“I had Deacon for a week, and then we were in distance learning and everything was shutting down,” Wolf said. “The obedience facilities and training places just weren’t doing it. I haven’t done the formal training, but I train them a lot at home, so they’ve got a good foundation and basics.”

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