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Leash Reactivity in Rescue Dogs: A Step-by-Step Training Guide

calendar_today10 February 2026schedule3 min read
Leash Reactivity in Rescue Dogs: A Step-by-Step Training Guide

Your dog lunges and barks on walks? Leash reactivity is common in rescues and very manageable with the right approach.

What Is Leash Reactivity?

Leash reactivity is when your dog overreacts to triggers (other dogs, people, bikes, cars) while on leash. It usually looks like barking, lunging, or pulling.

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Reactivity is almost always rooted in fear or frustration — not aggression. Understanding this changes everything about how you approach it.

Why Rescue Dogs Are Often Reactive

arrow_rightLack of early socialisation
arrow_rightPrevious negative experiences on leash
arrow_rightFrustration from being restrained (they cannot flee)
arrow_rightOverstimulation after time in a shelter
arrow_rightBarrier frustration (leash prevents natural greeting)

Equipment You Need

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Never use prong collars, choke chains, or shock collars on a reactive dog. These increase fear and make reactivity worse.

The LAT Method (Look At That)

1

Spot the trigger before your dog does

2

Mark the moment your dog notices it (say "yes" or click)

3

Reward heavily with a treat

4

The dog learns: seeing a trigger = treats happen = triggers are good

5

Gradually decrease distance over many sessions

The U-Turn Technique

When a trigger appears too suddenly:

1

Say "let's go" in a happy voice

2

Turn 180 degrees and walk away

3

Reward your dog for following you

4

Create distance until your dog relaxes

Common Mistakes

1

Tightening the leash when you see a trigger — This signals danger to your dog

2

Yelling "no" or jerking the leash — Adds more stress to an already stressed dog

3

Forcing your dog to "face their fears" — Flooding makes reactivity worse

4

Avoiding walks altogether — Your dog still needs exercise and enrichment

Realistic Expectations

1

Week 1-2: Practice in low-trigger environments. Build the treat-trigger association.

2

Month 1: Some improvement in mild triggers. Still avoid high-traffic areas.

3

Month 2-3: Noticeable progress. Your dog looks at you instead of lunging.

4

Month 3-6: Major triggers become manageable. You can walk most routes.

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Progress is not linear. Your dog will have bad days. That does not mean the training is not working.

helpFrequently Asked Questions

Will my reactive rescue dog ever be normal on walks?expand_more

Most reactive dogs improve dramatically with consistent training. Some may always need management around certain triggers, but walks can become enjoyable for both of you within a few months.

Should I avoid other dogs completely while training?expand_more

Not completely, but manage exposure carefully. Walk at off-peak times, use distance as your tool, and always have an escape route. Controlled exposure at a comfortable distance is part of the training.

Is a reactive dog dangerous?expand_more

Reactivity looks scary but is usually fear-based, not aggression. A reactive dog barking and lunging on leash is trying to create distance from what scares them. With proper training, most reactive dogs are perfectly safe.

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