Pups with Purpose - Dog Walking

Pups with Purpose - Dog Walking Pups with Purpose believes every dog deserves a little extra love and exercise of body & mind. Light petting, soft voice, and praise.

I'm Tierra and am dedicated to providing reliable enriched dog walking services specific to your dogs drives that is guaranteed to make them happy and tired. Sample 30-Minute Enrichment Walk $25

0:00 – 5:00 | Sniff & Go Warm-Up
Sniff freely at the start of the walk. Use a long leash (10–15 ft if safe) to allow relaxed movement and exploration. Follow their nose without rushing—sniffing is enrichi

ng!

5:00 – 10:00 | Targeted Obedience Games
Practice a few commands: sit, down, stay, come, touch
mixing in short recalls and high value reward.

10:00 – 15:00 | Scent Work or Treasure Hunt
Tossing treats in grass or hiding them under leaves/behind a tree and encourage dog to search using their nose.

15:00 – 20:00 | Parkour & Movement Challenge
Let dog hop on a low wall, weave between posts/legs, walk along a log, or crawl under a bench etc. using cues.

20:00 – 25:00 | Decompression Sniff Walk
Back to relaxing—letting dog sniff and meander again.

25:00 – 30:00 | Cool Down & Connection
Gentle leash walking together back home — keeping pace slow and calm. Sample 45-Minute Enrichment Walk $35

0:00-5:00 – Warm-up sniff and free sniff time
Loose leash, light movement, no commands. Letting dog decompress and engage scent-wise.

5:00-15:00 – Breed-specific activity #1
Examples:
- Herding: directional work
- Scent hound: scent trail game
- Sporting: carry or retrieve

5:00-20:00 – Obedience or trick training
Practice sits, downs, eye contact, or a known trick in a calm spot.

20:00-35:00 – Breed-specific activity #2
Mix up pace (jog/run, or a deep sniff game). Add challenge or movement variety.

35:00-40:00 – Decompression walk
Return to a casual pace. Allow for sniffing and soft engagement.

40:00-45:00 – Cooldown + calm exposure
Sit and watch environment quietly, do gentle petting, or feed a scatter of treats/food. Let the dog wind down and reinforce a calm state before returning home

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Sample 60-Minute Enrichment Walk $45

0:00–10:00 – Loose leash sniff & settle
Free sniffing with minimal cueing.

10:00–20:00 – Engagement games
Work on recall, name response, or watch-me games depending on the dog’s drive.

20:00–30:00 – Breed-specific challenge
Set up a sniff trail, flirt pole game, carry item, or directional challenge.

30:00–40:00 – Trick or agility play
Use natural obstacles for movement fun: up, over, through.

40:00–50:00 – Decompression walk
Natural pace, no cues, loose leash.

50:00–60:00 – Relax & reward
Sit, pet, engage lightly. Let the dog wind down and reinforce a calm state before returning home.

SOOOOO excited to announce my new K9 Anti-Social Social Club on Thursdays! For neutral, dog-selective pups who enjoy bei...
02/13/2026

SOOOOO excited to announce my new K9 Anti-Social Social Club on Thursdays!

For neutral, dog-selective pups who enjoy being near dogs, not on top of them. Safe socialization with energy matched pups, brain and body enrichment, basic obedience work, and decompression 1:1s with me before going home.

Pick up and drop off is included and your dog will be out of the house for 2-3 hours.

I have some AM and PM spots left - weekly and bi-weekly options available for pups in Langford, Colwood, and Metchosin.

AM dog group is more suited for younger energetic pups, PM group for the more mellow older pups.

DM me for more details! 🐾



https://www.instagram.com/reel/DUrqvwRkc2W/?igsh=MWNxODNxZHoxd2dvZQ==

Hello shift workers!!! Check out this fun opportunity to work with your dog independently with a virtual tricks and conf...
11/26/2025

Hello shift workers!!! Check out this fun opportunity to work with your dog independently with a virtual tricks and confidence class at your convenience. Whoop whoop! Great opportunity for your super sensitive/reactive dogs to create new skills while bonding.

🌟 VIRTUAL TRICKS & CONFIDENCE BUILDING CLASS 🌟

Beat the winter blues and boost your dog’s skills — all from the comfort of home!

I’m excited to announce a brand-new online tricks and confidence-building class starting the first week of December!

🎥 How It Works:
• 1 training video posted weekly in a private Facebook group
• Full 3-month access from the day you pay
• Ask questions + join discussions right in the video comment sections
• Train at your own pace, in your own space — perfect for small homes, apartments, and busy schedules!

Cost:
• $50.00 + tax per person for the full program
*additional virtual private lessons also available — $60.00 per 45-minute video call

What We’ll Cover:
A variety of fun tricks and confidence-building exercises designed to keep your dog mentally stimulated and entertained all winter long.

📩 Ready to join?

Register below ↘️⬇️↙️

https://www.cognitoforms.com/K9GoodlifeYYJ/TricksClassDec2025

Or

Email K9goodlifedog
[email protected] to reserve your spot!

Let’s make training fun, engaging, and accessible — no matter the weather!





This is an incredible breakdown of breed purpose, issues that can arise when their needs are not met, and ideas for fulf...
08/04/2025

This is an incredible breakdown of breed purpose, issues that can arise when their needs are not met, and ideas for fulfillment. Wow!

Biological Fulfilment in Dogs: More Than Just Walkies and a Bowl of Kibble

It’s easy to forget, in our modern world of comfortable sofas, retractable leads, and pampered pups, that dogs were never bred just to keep us company. A hundred years ago, and not even that long ago, in truth, the overwhelming majority of dogs were working animals. Whether they were herding sheep, guarding livestock, pulling carts, flushing birds, or killing rats, they had a purpose.

Even today, beneath the glossy coats of show dogs and beneath the cuddly appeal of designer crossbreeds (yes, mutts with marketing), there lies a dog bred for function. And if we, as owners, handlers, or trainers, fail to honour that legacy, we do so at the dog’s expense.

Because here’s the truth: a dog that isn’t biologically fulfilled will find its own outlet. And more often than not, that outlet is inconvenient at best, destructive at worst. Barking, digging, chasing shadows, hu***ng your favourite cushion, all signs of a dog trying to satisfy needs that aren’t being met.

So, how do we fix it? We stop training behaviours in a vacuum and start meeting biological needs. Below is a breakdown of the major breed groups and how we can tailor our enrichment to suit their natural instincts.

1. Herding Dogs (Collies, Shepherds, Cattle Dogs, etc.)

Biological drive: Movement control. These dogs were bred to manage the movement of livestock, often independently, across fields and long distances.

Signs of unmet needs: Shadow chasing, heel nipping, obsessive ball chasing, car lunging, controlling children or other pets.

Ideas for fulfilment:
• Directional games (cones, left/right, send-aways).
• Treibball (urban herding using large balls).
• Structured obedience with movement and stillness (engage-disengage exercises).
• Scent-based searches in combination with movement-based puzzles.
• Work-to-eat activities that require problem-solving.

2. Gundogs (Retrievers, Spaniels, Setters, Pointers)

Biological drive: Hunting, flushing, marking, retrieving, often over water and rough terrain.

Signs of unmet needs: Scavenging, excessive mouthing, barking at movement, lack of impulse control, zoomies.

Ideas for fulfilment:
• Scent games (find the treat, find the article, scent pairing).
• Retrieving tasks using dummies or toys, incorporating steadiness.
• Water play with purpose—structured retrieves into lakes or ponds.
• Memory marks (mark, leave, retrieve later).
• Sniffy walks—lead walks focused on olfactory stimulation, not distance.

3. Terriers

Biological drive: Earthwork, dispatching vermin, digging, tenacity and problem-solving under pressure.

Signs of unmet needs: Barking, digging, grabbing clothes, attacking toys or garden hoses, intense focus on small animals.

Ideas for fulfilment:
• Dig pits, designated areas where digging is encouraged.
• Puzzle feeders with resistance (tug-style).
• Scent detection with alert indication.
• Burrow games, treats hidden in sand or soil.
• High-energy tug and release games with control elements.

4. Scent Hounds (Beagles, Bassets, Foxhounds)

Biological drive: Tracking, trailing, following a scent to its source, often for hours without handler input.

Signs of unmet needs: Pulling on lead, absconding, ignoring recalls, nose constantly down.

Ideas for fulfilment:
• Trailing exercises using human scent or food trails.
• Scent discrimination games using multiple odours.
• Long lead sniffaris, structured, slow walks with lead slack to allow free sniffing.
• Tracking lines in rural areas using flags or markers.
• Scattered food searches in long grass or woodland.

5. Sighthounds (Greyhounds, Whippets, Lurchers)

Biological drive: Chase, speed, and prey drive visual triggers.

Signs of unmet needs: Chasing cyclists or joggers, lunging at fast-moving dogs, explosive energy followed by long lethargy.

Ideas for fulfilment:
• Flirt pole sessions—short bursts with impulse control.
• Recall games involving sight-based targets.
• Chase games with toy release upon success.
• Freedom fields, safe, enclosed running spaces.
• Visual marker games (sit at a distance marker, then release to run).

6. Working & Utility Breeds (Rottweilers, Dobermanns, Boxers, Schnauzers, etc.)

Biological drive: Guarding, drafting, thinking under pressure, general purpose work.

Signs of unmet needs: Guarding spaces or objects, excessive barking, hypervigilance, pulling on the lead, separation issues.

Ideas for fulfilment:
• Structured obedience with high expectations.
• Scent work to reduce hypervigilance.
• Confidence-building through agility-style obstacles.
• Cart pulling or resistance-based exercises (with proper equipment).
• ‘On duty’ jobs such as carrying a backpack or patrolling a set route.

7. Toy & Companion Breeds (Pugs, Cavaliers, Bichons, etc.)

Biological drive: Despite their size, many retain traits from working ancestors, ratting, alert barking, or even herding!

Signs of unmet needs: Clinginess, separation anxiety, demand barking, frantic energy in short bursts.

Ideas for fulfilment:
• Short problem-solving tasks (cups and treat games).
• ‘Find it’ games indoors or in small gardens.
• Scent work adapted to scale.
• Training routines with trick components.
• Carrying light items or learning “jobs” indoors.

8. Nordic & Primitive Breeds (Huskies, Malamutes, Basenjis, etc.)

Biological drive: Endurance, independence, hunting, and working in harsh conditions with minimal guidance.

Signs of unmet needs: Escaping, aloofness, lack of recall, vocalisation, destructive chewing.

Ideas for fulfilment:
• Canicross or bikejoring (fitness with purpose).
• Scent work with minimal handler input.
• Cold-weather enrichment (ice cubes, snow play).
• Long-distance walks with pack gear.
• Natural scavenging-style feeding routines.

So, What Does Biological Fulfilment Really Mean?

It means looking beyond the “walk twice a day and chuck a ball” routine and asking yourself: What was this dog bred to do? And then giving them a version of that they can do today, within the safety and structure of a modern environment.

It’s not about exhausting them, it’s about enriching them. The right biological outlet calms the nervous system, builds confidence, and strengthens the dog-handler relationship.

Yes, even your “just a pet” Cockapoo or your retired showline Golden Retriever has the genetic blueprint of a worker inside them. And if we ignore it, we risk having dogs that are frustrated, confused, and at odds with the lives we expect them to lead.

Final Thought

As trainers and handlers, our job isn’t just to stop behaviours, it’s to understand why they exist and channel them into something productive. Satisfying a dog’s biological needs isn’t a luxury, it’s the foundation for emotional balance, obedience, and wellbeing.

Train the dog in front of you, yes. But fulfil the dog inside them, too.
www.k9manhuntscotland.co.uk



🐶CALLING ALL DOG LOVERS! I’m looking for dogs and dedicated handlers to trial our Enrichment Guide—and we need YOUR help...
07/12/2025

🐶CALLING ALL DOG LOVERS!

I’m looking for dogs and dedicated handlers to trial our Enrichment Guide—and we need YOUR help!

Specifically, we’re looking for 2-3 dogs from these breed groups:
✨ Herding
✨ Sporting
✨ Working
✨ Hound
✨ Terrier
✨ Toy
✨ Non-Sporting

Whether your dog loves sniffing, solving puzzles, playing games, or just needs a little extra mental stimulation, I want to hear from you!

As a tester, you’ll receive a FREE copy of the guide which includes a PDF download, printable pages, a 7 day tracker template and weekly enrichment planner! All that in exchange for your honest feedback after trying out some of the activities with your dog. It’s a win for everyone!!

➡️ Comment below with your dog’s breed (or mix!) and I’ll get in touch with details.
➡️ Share with a friend who has a dog—we want a wide variety of testers!

Let’s enrich more dogs’ lives—together! 🩷🩵

Address

Langford, BC

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 3:30pm
Wednesday 10am - 2pm
Friday 10am - 2pm
Saturday 10am - 4pm
Sunday 10am - 4pm

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