
Genius training trick to help stop your dog getting distracted
Dog owners across the nation are in agreement that their furry friends are 'easily distracted'. Whether it's seeing other dogs on walks or someone ringing the doorbell, it's easy for their dogs to lose focus. Typically, four in ten say their dog gets distracted when the post arrives, or when a cat strolls by.
Only nine per cent said their dog has never ignored a command because their attention was elsewhere. While the majority of dog owners admire the fact Guide Dogs seem to be able to ignore distractions, two thirds said their pet would never have the focus needed to become one themselves.
Karen Brady, who works as a training and behaviour business partner at Guide Dogs – the organisation behind the study – commented: "Taking your dog on a walk is great for both the dog and the owner."
However, she also pointed out: "while you can't eradicate all distractions and make your dog resistant to them all, it's important to know how to regain control and calm your dog down."
In an innovative approach to training, Guide Dogs use a life-like toy squirrel fastened to a remote-controlled car, which helps the dogs ignore tempting distractions.
It's suggested that mimicking an everyday situation in a controlled environment can eliminate your dog's urge to chase after distractions such as a squirrel or car in other environments. For guide dogs this means they're able to focus on their job.
Karen added: "Dogs are intelligent beings. By positively reinforcing specific actions, we can train our dogs to resist the temptation to chase a squirrel up a tree, or other forms of wildlife they might come across whilst out and about."
"It is not really common knowledge that we employ such techniques, so putting a spotlight on our squirrel car helps to broaden the awareness of how we train our dogs and get them ready to perform vital duties as Assistance Dogs," she adds.
KAREN BRADY'S TOP TRAINING TIPS:
Focus on what you do want
Rather than thinking, 'I want my dog to stop chasing something', instead, think, 'I want my dog to act with this specific behaviour' as the goal. This gives you and your dog something to focus on teaching, like a really good sit action.
Patience makes perfect
Practice does too, but start with small expectations. A dog that has spent a year chasing squirrels isn't suddenly going to listen to you because you've decided to train them. Teach your dog to do the behaviour you want them to do away from all the distractions to begin with.
Train with something your dog really likes
You're competing with squirrels or cats, so you need something your dog values. That could be some roast chicken, their favourite treats, or a beloved toy. When they get it right, they get their prize.
Break it down
We never start training in the park full of squirrels and we certainly don't try to teach everything at once. We teach a specific behaviour through reinforcement training, then gradually bring in the distraction.
As training progresses, we'll combine behaviour and the distraction. Gradually your training drills will go so well that your dog will automatically check in with you, ignore the distraction, sit, or continue guiding to their next kerb or walking politely on lead beside you.
Be kind to yourself
When it goes wrong, take a deep breath and plan for next time. Even the professionals make mistakes, we simply make it easier for the dog next time, and build up to the distraction at a slower rate. Slow and steady builds longer lasting results and resilience than rushing through the process.

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Spectator
18 hours ago
- Spectator
I'm embracing my inner Karen
I told off four strangers last week. The first was a foreign gentleman lounging on a side lawn at Marble Arch and cooking a meal. He fanned the flames of his makeshift barbecue with a flap of cardboard as four women in long robes looked on, awaiting their feast. 'You can't cook here', I said. He looked at me blankly. His harem scowled. 'It's disgusting', I said. Smoke swirled at my ankles. I left. Next up was a middle-aged man at Portman Square who was roaring into his mobile phone in Arabic. Is it wrong of me to consider this doubly rude – not only to bellow so thunderously in a public area but in a language you know few people will understand? 'Can you stop shouting, please?', I said. 'Sorry, sorry', he replied, and because I still have wet liberal tendencies, that made me feel bad. Then there was the boy putting litter into the basket of a Lime bike. 'That isn't a bin. That is', I said, pointing across the road. He shrugged and strolled off. Finally there was the young lady on the Tube recording a voice note on her phone. For a moment I was dazzled by her aplomb. At her age I would have turned beetroot red if someone so much as said 'Good morning' to me on the Underground. And yet here was this girl noisily regaling a carriage of perfect strangers with the piffle of her social life. My wonderment was shortlived. 'Can you stop, please?', I said. She muttered sheepishly into her phone: 'I have to go, a man is shouting at me.' I didn't shout. I am a Karen. I have joined that least loved section of society: white people of a certain age who feel a burning urge to rebuke the loutish and ill-mannered. And you know what? We need more Karens. We need more people willing to confront the crisis of manners, to stand against the withering of social decorum that has reduced so much of public life to a cold, lawless-feeling moral minefield. Join me – embrace your inner Karen. I'm not a London doomerist. I laugh when people say 'London is over', as if this ancient metropolis that survived sackings, plagues, the Fire, the Blitz, the Smog and Sadiq Khan (so far anyway) might now fall down because people are behaving like oafs. Yet there is a problem. You can feel it. You can hear it. Sometimes you can smell it. Those cursed e-bikes whizzing by. Tinny music on the bus. Idiots FaceTiming with abandon. People tucking into meals on the Tube. Teenagers who never shut up. Not to mention the graffiti, the phone-snatching, the shoplifting, all of which the police are too busy making pronoun badges to solve. London feels tetchy, acrimonious even. You get the feeling that you're less a free citizen of a great city than an NPC in the videogame of someone else's life. Some on the right blame it on the surge in migrants. I'm sure that's part of it, but it can't be the whole story. I grew up in a community of immigrants in London. There were us Micks, Indians, Pakistanis, some Windrush descendants, a smattering of Italians. And everyone knew how to behave. Indeed, our immigrant parents were often more disciplinarian than the English kids' parents. A red ear awaited the kid dumb enough to play up in public. No, the problem is the slow corrosion of the informal infrastructure through which we once put manners on people. The young are shocked when I tell them we were often told off by strangers when we were their age. It's true. Old men on the bus would tell us to pipe down. Stressed mums would bark 'Move it!' at teens clogging up shop doorways. Once, an old duffer irritated by our noise clocked our distinctive RC school uniforms and said: 'You go to the convent on the hill?' It put the fear of God into us: bringing the school into disrepute had consequences, sometimes corporal ones. It is these checks and balances of everyday life that have wilted almost to extinction. For me, the most depressing sight in London in 2025 is not the vexing teens or mobile-phone blatherers or supercilious players of music – it's the cowed older men and women. There they are on public transport, on the streets, in shops, stooped, hushed, always staring ahead to avoid eye contact with the post-social boors. These are the men and women who helped to turn even us rowdy, pasty Irish kids into something resembling gentlemen. Yet now, whether from fear or exhaustion, they've given up. It's like they've been decommissioned, put out to pasture by a society that thinks discipline is fascism and that someone cooking a meal in Marble Arch is a fab expression of 'cultural difference' rather than a smoky, insufferable eyesore. The wings of our elders have been clipped by the tyranny of relativism that grips our rulers. Absent that intergenerational duty of care, of course things will fall apart. People need signals, and right now, courtesy of our silence and timidity, the signal they're receiving is that they can do anything they want. Karens, step up. Call out the anti-social. Demand quiet. Expect respect. The restoration of manners is the starting point of the restoration of Britain itself.


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4 days ago
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Guide Dogs fundraisers thank Lanarkshire shoppers for support
Volunteers from the Hamilton group raised £1500 with a stall and collection at Tesco in Carluke. Fabulous fundraisers from Hamilton's Guide Dogs group collected an impressive £1500 for the charity thanks to the support of generous staff and customers at Tesco in Carluke. Volunteers and their canine companions sold charity merchandise and received donations from shoppers at the store on Lanark Road to reach the total, which will be used to support the charity's life-changing work for people with sight loss, including raising and training vital guide dogs. New supporters are being invited to get involved with the fundraising group, in roles ranging from regular or occasional helpers to deputy group co-ordinator or secretary. Guide Dogs, which is almost entirely dependent on public donations, told how it costs £102,000 to raise, train and support a guide dog from birth to retirement – and Hamilton fundraising group co-ordinator William Vaughan said: 'I know the difference these donations can make.' He had his first guide dog, Murdoch, for seven years; and is now supported by current companion Sweep, who has been with him for the past year. William said: 'I got Murdoch in 2016 and he was a great dog that changed my life – he kept me safe and enabled me to do so much, including travelling all over the UK. Sadly, Murdoch passed away late 2023 and I felt like I wasn't able to go anywhere. 'I was invited to join the local Guide Dogs fundraising group around that time. I wasn't sure if this was right for me, but I liked that I would get to meet other dogs. It turned out to be amazing and the positive response from the public is overwhelming.' He teamed up with black Labrador cross golden retriever Sweep in July 2024 and is back to living an 'active and independent life' – and said: 'Sweep is so eager to please, from when he gets up in the morning to the time he goes to bed. He loves it when he is at an event; he gets a day where the harness goes off he loves interacting with the public.' Fundraising group co-ordinator William added: 'With having those responsibilities, I was able to learn about other parts of volunteering within Guide Dogs, from being a puppy raiser to fostering dogs whilst on their training – but fundraising is the one for me. You become part of a family, not only when fundraising but outside this role too.' Guide Dogs west of Scotland community fundraising manager Sandi Johnson said: 'I am so proud of the Hamilton fundraising group who attended Tesco Carluke and raised over £1500. 'These volunteers are so passionate and out in all weathers, making a huge difference to local people living with a vision impairment in our communities. Thank you to Tesco shoppers who donated, and to the staff who welcomed and looked after our volunteers.' Now local residents are being invited to join the successful Hamilton fundraising group – who received an award for their efforts in raising £13,000 for the charity, which has a base at Auchingramont Road. The group is seeking a deputy co-ordinator and a secretary to help with its administration, and would also like to hear from anyone interested in helping with fundraising activities whether regularly or doing so now and again.


North Wales Live
24-07-2025
- North Wales Live
Guide Dog training trick could stop your dog from getting distracted
The majority of dog owners describe their furry friends as 'easily distracted'. Whether it's seeing other dogs while they are out on a walk or the sound of the doorbell, dogs often struggle to maintain their concentration. Only 9 per cent claim their dog has never ignored a command because they were too distracted. Instead, four in ten pet owners said their dog gets side tracked by things like the post arriving or a cat walking by. Consequently, while many people admire the discipline of Guide Dogs, two-thirds of owners doubt their own dog's ability to match that level of focus. Karen Brady, a training and behaviour business partner at Guide Dogs, who were responsible for the study, said: "Taking your dog on a walk is great for both the dog and the owner. But while you can't eradicate all distractions and make your dog resistant to them all. "It's important to know how to regain control and calm your dog down." Guide Dogs have adopted an innovative training method involving a life-like toy squirrel attached to a remote-controlled car, which helps to teach the dogs to avoid distractions. By simulating real-life scenarios within a controlled setting, they suggest that owners can help diminish their dog's instinct to be distracted by things such as squirrels or cats elsewhere. For guide dogs, this means they can remain focused on their vital work. "Dogs are intelligent beings," Karen said. "By positively reinforcing specific actions, we can train our dogs to resist the temptation to chase a squirrel up a tree, or other forms of wildlife they might come across whilst out and about." She also added: "It is not really common knowledge that we employ such techniques, so putting a spotlight on our squirrel car helps to broaden the awareness of how we train our dogs and get them ready to perform vital duties as Assistance Dogs." KAREN BRADY'S TOP TRAINING TIPS: Focus on what you do want Rather than thinking, 'I want my dog to stop chasing something', instead, think, 'I want my dog to act with this specific behaviour' as the goal. This gives you and your dog something to focus on teaching, like a really good sit action. Patience makes perfect Practice does too, but start with small expectations. A dog that has spent a year chasing squirrels isn't suddenly going to listen to you because you've decided to train them. Teach your dog to do the behaviour you want them to do away from all the distractions to begin with. Train with something your dog really likes You're competing with squirrels or cats, so you need something your dog values. That could be some roast chicken, their favourite treats, or a beloved toy. When they get it right, they get their prize. Break it down We never start training in the park full of squirrels and we certainly don't try to teach everything at once. We teach a specific behaviour through reinforcement training, then gradually bring in the distraction. As training progresses, we'll combine behaviour and the distraction. Gradually your training drills will go so well that your dog will automatically check in with you, ignore the distraction, sit, or continue guiding to their next kerb or walking politely on lead beside you. Be kind to yourself When it goes wrong, take a deep breath and plan for next time. Even the professionals make mistakes, we simply make it easier for the dog next time, and build up to the distraction at a slower rate. Slow and steady builds longer lasting results and resilience than rushing through the process.