Last week was a busy week for Terry Curtis. The Niagara Falls native was staying in Key West, Fla. at the Hemingway House, the former home of Nobel Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway, working with its famous six- and seven-toed cats. From there, she had to hop on a plane for New York City to appear on NBC’s Today Show and talk with Meredith Viera about pet phobias.
“It’s still pretty surreal,” Curtis said. “Last week was a pretty incredible week. ... It was really one of those ‘take pause’ kind of moments.”
Curtis has been making a name for herself as an expert of animal behavior — a still relatively new but growing area of veterinary science.
Though the recognition is nice, Curtis just wants to help people understand animal behavior better, she said.
“My goal has always been to educate people and let them know there are things that can be done so their pet can stay a member of the family,” she said. “To reach that level (of recognition) is very exciting because I think this message can reach people — when they’re having problems with their pets, they don’t have to euthanize them.”
Curtis graduated from LaSalle Senior High School and went onto Keuka College where she graduated with a bachelor’s degree in biology. But it wasn’t until 13 years later, she got into animal behavior.
After working for ExxonMobil Chemical, she eventually decided to go to veterinary school and graduated from the University of Florida and received a master’s degree from the University of Georgia, one of only a handful of schools that offered programs in animal behavior.
Now, she has become an expert in the field, helping pet owners deal with problems from phobias to aggression.
Animal phobias, she said, are complicated to understand. A phobia of storms, for example, can have a number of factors: The sound of thunder, flash of lightening, wind and rain or changes in barometric pressure.
Curtis, who now lives in Florida, dealt with one client whose dog jumped out of a glass window because it was so scared of a storm, she said.
“It really seems they want to be out of their own skin,” Curtis said. “If they’re inside, they want to be outside. If they’re outside, they want to be inside. It’s really about getting to the point where they’ll be comfortable — where they can even begin to learn that storms are OK.”
Medication can be a short-term solution, Curtis said. Exposing a dog to the sound of thunder through CDs and gradually increasing the volume and duration can help reduce its fear level. Special wraps that reduce a dog’s sensitivity to static charges built up by storms can help too.
Some fears in pets can border on unusual: The sound of rustling leaves, the sound of a toilet paper roll — or everything.
“Some dogs are afraid of everything,” she said. “The owner comes home from the store with a bag and the dog is completely petrified. Or the dog is OK with a box that’s there, but if you move it, they become petrified.”
Training, she said, can teach dogs manners, but in response to phobia-induced behaviors, training will only increase anxiety. Some animals act aggressive when they feel scared, not because they are violent, and it’s the fear that needs to be addressed, she added.
But it’s getting easier for pet owners to get help with pet behavior. There are now more than 40 board-certified animal behavior programs around the country, compared to just a handful when Curtis started out.
And if the feedback Curtis gets from friends and family is any indication, the growth in animal behavior studies is a good thing. It’s hard to go to a party without someone having a pet quirk of their own to ask Curtis about.
“People always ask questions,” she said with a laugh. “Everyone always has a problem or a relative they say should see me. They say ‘Oh, my dog does this.’ It’s tough because I want to help everybody and you can’t always give a five minute answer.”
Local News
PROFILE: Falls native an expert on pet behavior
Animal behaviorist Terry Curtis puts dog phobias at ease
- Local News
-
-
SLIDESHOW: Memorial Day Weekend 2012
Niagara Falls celebrates Memorial Day Weekend activities on Saturday with a parade on Pine Avenue, a memorial service and viewing of the new Veterans Memorial at Hyde Park, a concert series on Old Falls Street and free boat safety inspections by the Niagara County Sheriff Department Marine Division at the City of Niagara Falls Boat Docks on Buffalo Avenue.
-
Legislation protecting Falls air base units moves forward
The effort to protect jobs at the Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station got a boost from a committee in Washington, D.C. on Thursday.
-
Korean student robbed at gunpoint in Falls
Detectives are investigating the robbery of a 25-year-old woman Wednesday night in front of a motel in the 400 block of Main Street.
-
Davis will not seek Murphy removal
Lawyers for accused killer Matthew “Bones” Davis say their client will not ask to have Niagara County Court Judge Matthew J. Murphy III removed from his case.
-
Labor group laments economic development efforts
Economic development in New York state has become a joke to some in the area. And many of them are demanding changes to a process which spends approximately $3 billion a year.
-
Repaving work on Old Military Road rises to $790K
Sometimes a change is good. Sometimes a change is bad. For the Town of Lewiston, a change can be pretty costly.
-
Fifth-grader presents list of 400 names asking for new playground
A 10-year-old boy carrying a petition containing more than 400 signatures asked members of the Niagara Falls School Board on Thursday to consider building a new playground at his school.
-
Bomb threat leads to arrest at NT school
A North Tonawanda teen was arrested Thursday morning for sending a one-sentence bomb threat to the computer of a fellow high school student, resulting in a brief lockdown of the school.
- Sense of resignation on AES pact
-
Marching to the new veterans memorial
It's the unofficial beginning of summer.
Memorial Day may mean cookouts with hot dogs and hamburgers, a trip on the river in a boat or simply a day off from work Monday.
- More Local News Headlines
-


