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Yes, I'm the trainer you've heard about.

I'm Jeff Gellman, the guy with the long hair who walks 8-10 dogs at the same time around Providence every day, especially around Blackstone Blvd.

I am the trainer other trainers recommend for dogs that have INTENSE behavioral problems that they cannot fix. But I don't just work to fix behavioral problems with dogs. I can prevent such problems from happening. Many clients hire me right before they bring their new dog home. A client who hires me when a dog is 8 weeks old will have a dog that is fully trained at 6 months of age.

I can train any dog. "Experts" may tell you to be careful of trainers who claim this, and some call it being cocky. But I call it Intense Confidence in my abilities. I will never give up on your dog. I know I can communicate with dogs, I can see their thoughts, and I can "Awaken the True Spirit in your Dog."

I am the father of 6 wonderful daughters, 3 German Shepherds, an Akita, a Malinois, 2 Pit Bull Mixes, and 2 Chihuahuas. I also often have dogs for adoption - dogs that have been forgotten or scheduled to be euthanized, but that I am rehabilitating.

I truly love working with dogs. As an avid outdoors person - a backpacker, rock climber, and kayaker - I will work with a dog in any weather and on any terrain. This has been a great asset to building the confidence of my clients' dogs.

I'm a "Real-World" dog trainer, who will work with your dog in real-life situations. Your dog might lie down on command at home but not when distracted by kids running around, fire trucks speeding by, or other dogs barking. Your dog should do a SOLID "down" until you give another command. Because I deal with a lot of aggressive dogs, I have incredible structure in my training. Some people might find my training extreme, but when your dog is chasing a squirrel and heading into the street, do you want your dog to respond to you only 50% or 75% of the time or listen to you 100% of the time? Remember, too, that I do not attempt to take the playfulness out of your dog. Play in important, at appropriate times and places. In fact, I find that dogs respond well to my sense of humor. Please take a look around, read about my philosophy, and browse the photo gallery to learn more about how I work. If you are unsure about training for your dog, feel free to contact me with your questions or concerns.

Training is constant

Training is constant - on every walk, in every situation in and out of your house, every time you go in the car, or whenever you go to the dog park or to the woods. Chances are your dog already knows what sit, down, stay, and come mean, but might not perform the commands every time or for very long. I find that many dogs don't even pay attention to their owners most of the time. Dogs lunging at the end of their leashes, barking at other dogs, and not listening to their owners must be trained properly. You are responsible for training your dog, and I can teach you how.

You must be the pack leader

To have an obedient dog, the dog handler must train every family member in the household to act in the role of pack leader. This will eliminate most unwanted behaviors. Teaching a dog commands is not the same as teaching the dog tricks; it is guiding the dog to behave correctly in our world. Many people believe that because their dog knows how to sit that it is trained, but this is not true. Probably your dog sits because you are giving it treats. This is not the same as training. If you tell me your dog is not trained, I will probably tell you that the dog is trained. It is trained to not listen to you and to bark and lunge at people because you have never insisted that this is not correct behavior.

I train with a firm but gentle manner. Your dog will be excited to work with me and follow my lead because I am the pack leader. It is a HUGE load off a dog's shoulders to not have to be the pack leader any more, as most dogs don't want that responsibility. When you show more leadership, your dog can enjoy life more and be more confident. Dogs need to know that their owners are able to protect them and keep them safe, not the other way around. Your leadership will earn your dog's trust and respect, but if you are not a good pack leader, your dog will take over that role. My toddler can give my two German Shepherds a command and they will listen to her because they respect her as higher in the hierarchy of our pack.

I am not for everyone

Feel free to disagree with my philosophy on training. There are as many training philosophies as there are dogs. If I feel that you will not follow through with what I teach, I will probably stop training your dog. To achieve real results, you must take an active part in the training process. Unless everyone is on board with training your dog, the dog will not fully prosper.

I am very set in my beliefs about training. I often meet people who disagree with how I train dogs, but in the next breath they say they are amazed at how well my dogs listen to me, how happy my dogs are, and how well behaved they are. I hear "Wow, I wish my dogs behaved like yours" many times a day. Dogs can sense what we think, read our body language, and respond accordingly, so it is important that we always project calm leadership in order to receive the respect of our dogs.

Sometimes vets, breeders, and other people who have never trained dogs give bad training advice. Even when they do not understand my methods, they often comment on them in a negative way. I don't value someone's opinion if it lacks the education and experience to back it up.

Also, I meet other trainers who do not understand how I train dogs and say that my methods are not good. But I know exactly how other trainers use food, clickers, bribery, lures, and "positive reinforcement," and I know those methods don't work in the real world with its high-level distractions.

I believe in SOLID commands.

When you give a command once, your dog should obey the command. Don't develop the habit of repeating a command if you want your dog to listen to you. Multiple commands confuse your dog. You say," sit, sit, sit" and eventually your dog sits, so you give praise. But the dog thinks that it is supposed to sit only after you say "sit" multiple times; that is what you have trained the dog to do. With my training, when you will say the command only once, your dog will listen.

I work with your dog to make each command solid. For example, if you are at the park and you tell your dog to sit, your dog will stay in a SOLID SIT until you release it, even while screaming kids, bicycles, roller-bladers, other dogs, and squirrels go past you. I am big on real-world training. I work with your dog in all different terrain, all different weather (yes, even in rain or snow), and all different real-world situations.

Click here for a description of each solid command that I will teach your dog.

Who We Are

Jeff Gellman

Award-winning, nationally known dog trainer Jeff Gellman, Rhode Island's own dog whisperer, is on a mission to help people awaken the true spirit in dogs. He teaches deeper animal communication, explains the "power of the pack", and gives people the skills and confidence to lead their' own pack effectively.

Jeff brings you his own no-nonsense, real world training program, using blunt humor and honest wisdom. His life-changing techniques and bold approach brings fresh perspective to canine behavior modification and obedience. Gellman is an outspoken opponent of click and treat training, which he believes leads to increased disconnection between humans and dogs, increased aggression, and increased obesity. He helps people find solid solutions to age-old problems, using the insight of instinctual canine behavior.

When not working with his Solid K9 Training clients directly, Jeff enjoys taking packs of dogs on wilderness excursions, so they can experience their' true spirit in the natural elements. Jeff is a champion for regular exercise, and is seen daily, power-walking his pack on the East Side of Providence. He also rehabilitates dogs, many pro bono, who other trainers and programs have written off, giving them the dedicated chance to be spared from euthanasia. Jeff has logged tens of thousands of hours giving people the chance to live better lives with their dogs, and has innumerable testimonials. He is the proud father of his own 6 girls, and loves hiking, kayaking, and photography.


Jonathan Ricciardelli

Assistant Trainer, Kennel Manager

Name: Jonathan Ricciardelli
Age: 23
Hometown: Walpole, MA

Ever since I can remember I had an unspoken bond with animals and more specifically with dogs. It has been my dream to be a dog trainer and Jeff has helped make this possible. I am ready to learn all I can and become a confident, successful, real-world dog trainer devoted to bettering the lives of dogs as well as their families.

Education: Graduate of Roger Williams University
Bachelors Degree in Anthropology and Sociology, Minor in Graphic Design

For the past four years I have been studying human relations and the components that exist in culture. I have a strong understanding of how people, groups, and cultures work. I graduated from Roger Williams University in May 2010 and completed my thesis work on human-animal relationships. This research focused on how potential dog adopters perceive and classify dominant breeds. The goal of this research is to help in the fight to rid society of its negative view of these �dominant� breeds and help bring light to breed prejudices. I believe that all dogs deserve the right to be seen as individuals and should not be judged and stereotyped based on breed.


Clover and Romy

Assistant Trainers

Clover 5 & Romy 3 are daughers #5 & #6 of Jeff, they are home school kids and spend a good amount of time working the dogs daily. they have grown up around the training of dogs and the dogs have a primal knowledge that they are looking at 2 young pack leaders, they are extensions of myself. They have the energy and knowledge to work around dogs of every breed, size and temperament and just enough fear to stay safe but to help bring out the true spirit in the dogs they work with. They are both so important of the success of my board and train program and their training is keeping hundreds of children in New England from being hurt and bit from dogs.