For German Shepherd owners
Your German Shepherd isn’t stubborn. He’s bored.
You already walk him more than anyone you know. The couch cushion still didn’t make it.
It’s 6:15 on a Tuesday.
He got 45 minutes this morning. A full hour after work.
And he’s doing laps around the coffee table like he just came back from a spa day.
The window barking starts the second the mail truck turns onto your street.
You say “sit.” He sits. For two seconds. Then he’s up again, staring at you like, okay — what’s next?
You’ve watched the YouTube videos. Tried the whole a-tired-dog-is-a-good-dog thing. More walks. Longer walks.
And somehow the most exercised dog in the neighborhood is still eating drywall.
The part nobody tells you at puppy class
German Shepherds were bred to work sheep for eight hours a day. Every day. It’s the same brain police departments hand to K9 units and search-and-rescue teams.
That brain doesn’t come with an off switch. It comes with a job requirement.
A walk exercises his legs. Nothing on his schedule exercises his head.
And a working dog with no work invents his own job: patrol the window. Excavate the flowerbed. Field-strip a couch cushion.
The behavior isn’t the problem. It’s the symptom. The problem is a brilliant dog with an empty calendar.
So the fix isn’t more miles. And it isn’t more “discipline.” It’s giving that brain a workout.
That’s exactly what a trainer named Adrienne Farricelli built a whole program around. It’s called Brain Training for Dogs — and before you picture anything fancy: it’s 21 games. Played in your kitchen. With stuff you already own.
Adrienne is a CPDT-KA certified trainer — the certification that requires hundreds of logged training hours and a proctored exam, not a weekend of YouTube — and her work has been featured in USA Today. Everything is force-free. No yanking, no yelling, no shock collars. The games run from “Preschool” level (eye contact, targeting) all the way up to “Einstein.”
What it actually looks like
Tonight, you grab a muffin tin, six tennis balls, and a handful of his kibble.
Kibble goes in a few of the cups. Tennis balls cover all of them. The tin goes on the kitchen floor.
For the next ten minutes, that giant brain finally has a job. Nose working the seams. Paws careful. Head tilted at the last stubborn ball.
And then the thing every shepherd owner notices first:
Ten minutes of brain work tires him out like an hour at the park.
By 8pm he’s flat on his side in the living room. Not worn out. Satisfied.
The games stack from there. He learns to hold eye contact while the mail truck rolls by. To settle on a mat while you eat dinner — there’s a game called “Jazz Up, Settle Down” that teaches an actual off-cue, and honestly it’s the one I’d pay the whole $67 for by itself. To come when called, even mid-zoomie.
The chewing and the window patrol shrink on their own. You never corrected them — the boredom underneath them just left.
The honest part
Could you piece some of this together free on YouTube? Some of it, yes. I won’t pretend otherwise.
What the $67 buys is the order. Twenty-one games sequenced from easy wins to advanced work, each with a video demo, so you’re never guessing what comes next or why something isn’t clicking. Plus a separate section on specific problems — barking, digging, jumping, whining — and a private member forum where you can ask about the weird thing your dog does and get an actual answer.
What you’re actually buying
- 21 brain-training games, Preschool through Einstein level, each with video demonstrations
- Created by Adrienne Farricelli, CPDT-KA certified trainer — 100% force-free methods
- Bonus sections on specific problem behaviors, plus a private members’ forum
- $67 one-time — no subscription — instant online access — 60-day money-back guarantee handled directly by ClickBank
One more thing on that guarantee, because it’s the kind that’s actually usable: the purchase runs through ClickBank, so a refund inside 60 days goes through them. No phone call. No convincing anyone. If the games aren’t for you, you get your money back and keep the two months of practice.
Tonight, instead of the third walk
You put down a muffin tin and watch that big brain finally get to work.
By the weekend, you’re teaching “settle” instead of apologizing to the mailman.
And a month from now, you’re the owner whose shepherd holds a down-stay through dinner — not because he’s finally exhausted, but because somebody finally gave him a job.
See the 21 games on the official site →One-time $67 · Instant online access · 60-day refund through ClickBank
P.S. There’s no countdown timer on this page and nobody’s “closing the doors.” The program costs the same tomorrow. The 6pm zoomies will be back tomorrow too — that part’s up to you.


