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Owner Habits, Reconsidered

5 "harmless" habits that could actually be bad for your dog.

Not the obvious ones. The everyday things you do thinking you're being a good owner.

Most articles about things owners do wrong with their dogs are a bit insulting. They tell you not to feed chocolate, not to leave the dog in a hot car, not to skip vet visits. As if you didn't already know.

The habits worth talking about are the quieter ones. The things you do because they feel kind, social, or responsible. Things that look like good ownership but turn out to be working against your dog in ways most people never get told about.

These five are the ones we think are worth a closer look. Not because they're catastrophic. Because they're easy to fix once you know.

01

Letting them greet every dog on walks.

What you think
"They're being social. It's good for them to meet other dogs."
What's actually happening
You're forcing high-stress interactions on a tight lead, with no exit and no choice.

On-lead dog-to-dog greetings are one of the most consistently misread parts of dog ownership. Owners think they're encouraging friendliness. Trainers and behaviourists increasingly view them as the source of the problem most people are trying to prevent.

The mechanics are working against you. Dogs greeting on lead are face-to-face, restrained, unable to circle or move away naturally. Add the tension of the lead itself, which most owners tighten reflexively as the dogs approach, and you've created a confrontation, not a hello.

The pattern that develops is reactivity. Your dog learns: another dog on a walk means an obligatory, awkward, slightly stressful interaction. That's the foundation of pulling, lunging, and barking at other dogs on the lead.

The fix isn't to be antisocial. It's to be selective. Let them meet calm, known dogs off-lead in open space. On walks, walk past. Most dogs prefer it.

02

Using a retractable lead.

What you think
"They get more freedom to sniff and explore. Best of both worlds."
What's actually happening
You're training them to pull constantly, and removing your ability to react if something goes wrong.

Retractable leads are sold as a kindness. More room to roam. More natural for the dog. In practice, they're one of the most criticised pieces of equipment by professional trainers and a documented source of injuries to both dogs and owners.

The core problem is that the lead is always under tension. To extend it, the dog has to pull. Which means pulling is constantly rewarded with more lead, more space, more freedom. You're not letting them roam. You're teaching them that pulling works.

The thin cord makes things worse. It snaps under load. It burns hands. It wraps around legs. And in a real moment, when you need to pull your dog back from a road, another dog, or anything fast-moving, a retractable lead is the worst tool you can be holding.

If you want them to have more room, use a long lead. Five to ten metres of flat webbing, held in your hand, that you can adjust deliberately. Cheaper, safer, and it doesn't train pulling.

03

Letting them sleep wherever they want during the day.

What you think
"They look so relaxed. Whatever spot they choose is fine."
What's actually happening
Many adult dogs need a designated rest space to actually switch off, not just to lie down.

This is the one that surprises most owners. A dog dozing on the sofa, then moving to the kitchen floor, then upstairs, then back down again throughout the day, looks like a dog that's getting plenty of rest. They're horizontal most of the day. What's the problem?

The problem is the nervous system. Lying down isn't the same as switching off. Dogs that sleep in busy, central, exposed spots tend to stay in light, watchful rest. Every footstep, door opening, or passing van keeps them on standby. They look settled. They're not.

Working breeds and naturally anxious dogs are most affected. Behaviourists call this fragmented rest, and it can quietly contribute to over-arousal, irritability, and the kind of "always on" demeanour that owners often misread as energy.

The fix is small. A dedicated rest area, away from the main flow of the house, with a clear association as the place to fully relax. Most dogs learn to take themselves there once it's offered. The change in how they downshift is often noticeable within a week or two.

04

Bathing them too often.

What you think
"They need a wash. They got muddy / they smell / it's been a while."
What's actually happening
You're stripping the natural oils that protect their skin and coat.

This one creates a feedback loop most owners never see. A dog gets bathed because they look or smell like they need it. The bath strips the natural oils from their skin barrier. The skin gets drier. The coat dulls. Sometimes the dog starts scratching more. So they get bathed again, with a soothing shampoo this time. Which strips a little more.

Even gentle, hypoallergenic shampoos disturb the skin's natural balance. The oils that coat the hair shafts and protect the skin barrier are exactly what makes a dog water-resistant, low-odour, and comfortable. Wash them away too often and the dog has to work harder to rebuild them, often unsuccessfully.

For most dogs, a bath every four to eight weeks is plenty. Some breeds need less. Some need almost none, beyond rinsing off mud. Brushing does most of the actual cleaning work. A wet cloth wipes off the rest.

If your dog smells bad more often than that, the smell is rarely a hygiene problem. It's usually a skin, diet, or gut issue worth looking into.

05

Keeping the food bowl topped up all day.

What you think
"They can eat when they're hungry. It's gentler than enforcing meal times."
What's actually happening
You're losing your single most reliable early warning sign that something is wrong.

Free-feeding sounds kind, especially with picky eaters or small dogs that "just graze." It's also the habit that costs you the most diagnostic information about your dog's health.

Loss of appetite is one of the earliest signs of almost every problem dogs develop. Dental pain. Digestive upset. Infection. Pancreatitis. Kidney issues. If you're topping the bowl up throughout the day, you'll often miss the first few days of a change, sometimes longer. By the time it's obvious, you've lost a window.

The other issues are quieter. Free-feeding tends to dysregulate digestion, because the gut doesn't get the rest periods it's designed for. It contributes to slow, unnoticed weight gain, because you're never seeing a full portion at a time. And the picky eating itself often resolves once free-feeding stops, because dogs eat better with structure than without it.

Two meals a day, put down and lifted again after fifteen minutes whether they're eaten or not. Sounds harsh. Isn't. Most dogs adjust in days, and you get a reliable signal back the moment anything changes.

The Pattern

The habits that hurt most dogs are the ones that look like care.

None of these are huge mistakes. None of them are the kind of thing a vet would flag in a check-up. They're all small, well-intentioned decisions that, over time, work against the dog you're trying to take care of.

The reason they persist isn't laziness or ignorance. It's that they all feel like kindness in the moment. Letting them say hi. Giving them space on the lead. Letting them sleep where they want. Keeping them clean. Making sure there's always food.

Once you see them differently, they're easy to swap. Better walks. Better rest. Healthier skin. Earlier warning if something's wrong. All small changes. All adding up.

Good ownership often looks slightly different from kind ownership. The dog ends up better off.

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