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FAQ
How long does it take to train a dog?
There’s no straight up answer. Training depends on your dog’s age, history, environment, and the consistency of training that comes from you, the owner, between sessions. Some improvements can happen quickly, while deeper behaviour change takes time. Our focus is on sustainable progress, not quick fixes. I always recommend tracking your training progress so you can see how far you have come.
What age should I start training my dog?
Training can start the moment your dog comes home. Puppies benefit from early guidance, but dogs of any age can learn new skills. It’s never too early — and never too late — to start. Training starts at home, not when you can get them out on a walk. even teaching lead pressure.
How often should I train my dog?
Short, regular sessions work best. A few 10-15 sessions a day, woven into everyday life, is far more effective than occasional long sessions. Training should fit your lifestyle, not take it over.
Why does my dog pull on the lead?
Lead pulling is usually caused by excitement, habit, or frustration and lack of consistency with correction and praise in a timely manner. We focus on teaching dogs how to walk calmly while meeting their needs for movement, exploration, and clarity. We teach them the correct position and we teach owners how to interact at the right time.
How do I stop my dog jumping up?
Jumping is often a friendly or ever excited greeting behaviour. We work on teaching alternative, calmer ways for dogs to interact while making sure everyone stays comfortable, safe and relaxed.
Why does my dog behave at home but not outside?
Dogs don’t generalise learning well. Behaviours learned at home don’t automatically transfer to busy environments. Part of training is helping dogs succeed gradually in more challenging settings. Try retraining the behaviour you want in many different areas but going back a few steps when you move to each new area.
Do you use food or treats?
Yes and no, food is often used as a learning tool, especially in early stages. As skills improve, rewards are gradually varied so dogs respond reliably in everyday life. We also use clickers and training dummies/ dogs favourite toys etc. This is unique to each dog and will depend on your own dogs motivators.
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