Behaviour Breakdowns
Real training sessions, real dogs, real-life learning.
These videos highlight the small decisions, communication, and body language that shape every moment of a training session. You’ll see how training mechanics, timing, and environment all work together — and what that looks like in action with real dogs.
Browse Behaviour Breakdowns:
Communication Starts Long Before Contact
Dog greetings don’t start at the nose-to-nose moment. In this clip, two dogs meet for the first time and we slow down the approach to look at the communication happening before contact.
Part 2: When Hazel Doesn’t Want to Say Hi
Part 2 shows the same “no thanks” message in a more active setup. Hazel is standing, moving, and on leash, so her communication looks different: she changes her mind, moves in front of me, looks for support, scans the environment, and eventually circles behind me to keep watch.
Part 1: When Hazel Doesn’t Want to Say Hi
Hazel doesn’t bark, pull away, or make a scene. She quietly says “no thanks” to a greeting while sitting with me outside a store — a small moment that shows why subtle communication matters.
No Big Reaction— But There’s a Lot Going On
A quick chat with a neighbour can be incredibly stressful for a reactive dog— and their guardian. When Lucy and I run into someone on a walk, it’s all about supporting her, preventing reactions and taking mental notes on what happened.
Environment Shapes Behaviour
A quick training moment shows how reinforcement history and environmental setup influence the choices dogs make. When Ella jumps onto a nearby platform instead of following the figure-8 pattern, the reason isn’t disobedience — it’s learning history in action.
Breaking Duration on Purpose
Why “free” isn’t always a functional release, how competing reinforcers affect success, and how intentional breaks—using well-reinforced alternate behaviours—can support duration instead of weakening it.
Capturing Calm & People Watching
Quiet sessions like this build engagement, emotional regulation, and comfort in busy environments — all without needing to “train” anything flashy.
Staying With Me Around People
Lucy is a very social girl, and if she had it her way, she’d greet every single human in Coldwater. Today’s walk is all about helping her understand that not every passerby is an invitation.
Sitting in the Back Seat… Doing Nothing
Just hanging out and watching the world go by is a seriously underrated way to socialize your puppy, support a reactive dog, and reinforce behaviours you want to see more of.
Pattern Games for Walks
Some dogs feel uneasy in busy environments — new sounds, traffic, or movement can make walks stressful. This pattern game can help build confidence.
