27/03/2026

Leash Reactive Dog Help: Positive Training Steps to Calmer Walks

From Reactivity to Relief: Positive Ways to Help your Dog!

Do every day walks feel tense and unpredictable? If your dog scans, freezes, lunges or barks at the sight of other dogs, bikes or people, you are not alone. Reactive behaviours are not uncommon but can be treated with the right approach.

 

This article shows you how to build a practical case plan: set safe thresholds, choose routes and times that help, use decompression walks and scenting to regulate arousal, and progress with one treatment method LAT ‘Look at That’. You will also learn how to record arousal data, use video homework well, and know when to get help with our ‘Private Behaviour consultations’.

 

Throughout this blog, we keep the focus on empathy and evidence. Punishment may suppress behaviour in the moment, but it does not change how a dog feels. Education and consistency do.

Start with a calm baseline

What you need to understand with your dog’s reactive behaviour is that your dog’s nervous system is being activated here.  So the first thing you need to do is help your dog’s nervous system:

 

  1. Decompression walks: Choose quiet green spaces where your dog feels safe and let your dog sniff, meander and choose direction. Don’t ask your dog to do anything. Ten to twenty minutes of true sniff-and-stroll time often lowers arousal far better than a long, brisk march.
  2. Nosework:  Sprinkle-feed, scatter a small handful of treats through grass, or hide food in boxes in the yard. Nose-led activities tap into seeking systems that soothe and satisfy. If you want a guided program that suits reactive dogs, explore our local K9 Nose Work classes where dogs work one at a time with rest breaks.

 

If you are in Newcastle or Lake Macquarie and would like structured support, our K9 Nose Work classes at Adamstown are designed for all ages and are ideal for sensitive dogs. You can read more about our Newcastle scent work for dogs on our K9 Nosework page.

Map thresholds and choose kinder routes

A threshold is the distance at which your dog can notice a trigger and still think, take food and disengage. If your dog goes past their threshold, the brain shuts learning down.

  • Find the starting distance: In a quiet spot, allow your dog to notice a trigger. Can they eat soft treats, blink, sniff, or look back at you within 2 seconds? If yes, you are under threshold. If they stiffen, stare hard, stop taking food, or vocalise, you are too close and your dog has gone over threshold.
  • Create a route plan: Pick wide footpaths, cul-de-sacs, ovals with long sightlines, and times with fewer dogs or scooters. Avoid narrow chokepoints, off-lead beaches, dog park and café strips while you build your dog’s skills.
  • Add exits: Know where your exit points are and have exit strategies.  These “escape routes” might be behind you, like driveways or parked-car gaps, so you can arc away before your dog tips over threshold.

 

A small change like moving walks to quieter times can halve daily flare-ups. That relief matters.

Teach LAT – one method

‘Look At That’ (LAT) is one positive way of helping your dog with reactive behaviours.

 

  • LAT in brief: At a safe distance, let your dog glance at the trigger. The instant they look, mark (click or “yes”) and feed your dog high value food. You are pairing the sight with good stuff and teaching a simple behaviour loop, “I see it, I check in, means good stuff for me.”

 

Short, planned sessions beat chance encounters. Film a few reps so you can review your timing and your dog’s body language between lessons.  This is best done with a professional, qualified trainer to advise whether this method would be suitable for your individual dog.  We offer private consultations for reactive behaviours at our Kotara NSW office or in your home.

Use video homework and arousal logs

Progress speeds up when you track what actually happens.

Video homework tips:

  • Film or get someone to film your dog (keep clips under 60 seconds).
  • Film from the side so we can see head, tail and lead tension.
  • Narrate distances, trigger types and food values.
  • Trim to 2 to 3 key moments you want feedback so when working with a professional trainer, they can provide advice.

 

Arousal log essentials:

  • Date, time and weather.
  • Trigger and distance estimate.
  • Your dog’s body-language score (for example 1 to 5, where 1 is relaxed sniffing and 5 is full lunge-bark).
  • Recovery time to “back to eating/sniffing.”
  • What you did that helped, and what you will change next time.

 

Patterns will appear quickly, for example scooters at 15 metres are fine, but jogging dogs need 30 metres. That data guides your next week’s plan.

‘Scent work’ and ‘Sniffaris’ as regulation

Scenting is not a side activity; it is core regulation. Dogs engaged in nose-led work show improved optimism, focus and post-exercise calm. Two to three short sniff-focused sessions a day can reduce reactivity spillover on later walks.

 

If your dog loves hunting games, consider our K9 Nose Work classes where dogs work individually. It is low impact, builds confidence, and is designed to be safe for reactive or worried dogs. Learn more about our K9 Nose Work options in Newcastle and how dogs work one at a time with rest breaks.

Myths that stall progress

  • “Correct it out of them.” – A leash-pop can interrupt, but it will usually add fear to an already worried dog. Suppression can rebound later, and risk of a bite can increase when the dog feels trapped. We target emotional change, not suppressing your dog into silence but still feeling scared.
  • “He is being dominant!” – Most leash reactive behaviours are from fear, frustration, or lack of skills and exposure. When you meet the function of the behaviour, the behaviour softens.

When to add a behaviour consultation?

Reactive behaviours usually has several layers and causes.  Usually, we see dogs that display reactive behaviours because they are overwhelmed, lack of habituation in younger years, traumatic or negative experiences with other dogs, frustration and inability to regulate impulse control and pain is also a major factor in reactive behaviours.

 

It’s highly advisable to seek help early if your dog is showing reactive behaviours as this will give you and your dog the best success to make progress.

 

Dogaholics Dog Training & Behaviour Services provides Private Dog Behaviour Consulting in Newcastle at our Kotara office and online via Zoom or Teams. We also do home visits.

Our sessions include finding out why your dog is displaying these behaviours, what is causing them and we provide treatment strategies for implementation.  If you are searching for a Dog Trainer and Behaviour Consultant in the Newcastle area or need one-on-one dog behaviour sessions, we are ready to help!

FAQ: quick answers to common questions

  1. When should I see a dog behaviourist?
  • Seek help early when your dog starts showing reactive behaviours, especially when safety is a concern, or you feel overwhelmed. Early support prevents habitual patterns setting in.

 

  1. Are dog trainers and behaviour consultants  worth it?
  • A good behaviour professional provides assessment, a tailored plan and coaching so progress occurs, and risk is reduced. They have years of study, experience and gained knowledge to be able to help you and your dog.

 

  1. What are the 4 F’s of dog behaviour?
  • Fight, Flight, Freeze and Fidget (sometimes called Fool Around). These are stress responses. Noticing early Freeze or Fidget signs lets you add distance before Fight or frantic Flight appear.

 

If you would like some help with your dog, our team provides dog training and behaviour services across the Newcastle and Lake Macquarie areas of NSW. Please contact us here at Dogaholics Dog Training and Behaviour Services and we would be more than happy to help you!