Lucy and Olive Dog Training and Well Being

Lucy and Olive Dog Training and Well Being 🐾 Scentwork UK Trainer & Judge | Puppy & Scentwork Specialist | Choice-based, kind training for confident dogs and happy humans.

They say “Getting a dog will unlock so much. Will help with feeling alone, not wanting to go out!”
Suffering from PTSD, Anxiety or other mental health issues and have a dog but can’t go to class? Not sure about basic training, or want to improve the bond you have with your dog? Is your dog under exercised but you can’t face it? Let me give you the skills to enrich you and your dogs bond in your ho

me. I have psychotherapist training and lost my hearing through trauma and have worked with dogs all my life! My journey has made me realise that a bond with a dog can be very special. The joy of teaching your dog new things and enriching their lives through our actions is so rewarding. Let me help you on a one to one basis either in your home or garden, or an open space to start your journey. 🐾



For your peace of mind, I am fully insured and have an enhanced DBS certificate.

04/06/2026
Live now to book....Level 5 Scentwork Uk
03/06/2026

Live now to book....Level 5 Scentwork Uk

🐾 Class Update: New Challenges & New Faces! 🐾We had some creative search setups in class this week!For this session, we ...
29/05/2026

🐾 Class Update: New Challenges & New Faces! 🐾

We had some creative search setups in class this week!
For this session, we introduced floor searching—it’s an area dogs frequently breeze right past, so it was fantastic practice to get them intentionally slowing down and checking the ground beneath them.
We also challenged them with wall searches and a full room search. It was incredibly rewarding to watch every single dog work through the spaces so beautifully, trusting their noses and building that independent problem-solving confidence.

A massive well done to everyone, and a warm welcome to the new faces who joined our class this week—it was lovely to have you and your gorgeous dogs with us!
Check out a few highlights from class below. 🐾👃

29/05/2026

One of the most damaging ideas ever introduced into the dog world is the belief that dogs are constantly trying to dominate each other and humans. The “dominance theory” model taught people to view behaviour through the lens of control, hierarchy, defiance, and power struggles. Growling became a challenge. Avoidance became manipulation. Reactivity became an attempt to “be alpha.” Instead of asking what a dog was experiencing emotionally or developmentally, the focus became how to suppress the behaviour and regain control.

The problem is that this theory was built on a misunderstanding from the very beginning.

Much of dominance theory came from early captive wolf studies, where unrelated wolves were placed together in artificial environments with limited space and resources. Under stress, conflict naturally emerged, and researchers interpreted these interactions through rigid hierarchical structures. But wild wolf families do not function like this. Modern wolf research has shown that wolf packs are primarily family units.

The “alpha wolf” idea itself was later rejected by the very researchers who originally popularised it.

Yet the dog world continued building entire training systems around outdated ideas of power and submission.

What is often missed is that dogs are not entering our homes trying to outrank us. They are mammals born into a nervous system that is seeking safety, connection, regulation, and belonging. Behaviour is not driven by a desire for dominance. It is driven by survival, emotion, genetics, developmental experiences, attachment, and the state of the nervous system.

This is where the work surrounding social characters becomes incredibly important.

At the Wolf and Dog Development Centre, the understanding of canine behaviour moves far beyond simplistic ideas of dominance. Their work explores the reality that dogs are born carrying innate social tendencies and emotional predispositions that would historically have served a purpose within a social group or survival structure. Not every dog is designed to move through the world in the same way. Some dogs are naturally orientated towards environmental awareness and scanning. Some are more socially driven and relationship-focused. Some are naturally cautious, investigative, nurturing, or highly responsive to movement and pressure.

These are not “bad traits.” They are social characteristics that, in a natural setting, would contribute to the survival and balance of the group.

When we misunderstand these traits through the lens of dominance, we pathologise normal canine behaviour. A vigilant dog becomes “controlling.” A sensitive dog becomes “stubborn.” A dog struggling with emotional regulation becomes “disobedient.” But often the dog is not trying to dominate anything at all. They are expressing an ingrained survival system colliding with an environment they cannot cope with.

This is one of the reasons punishment-based approaches can be so damaging. If behaviour is rooted in stress, fear, developmental conflict, or nervous system dysregulation, suppressing the outward behaviour does not resolve the internal state. In many cases, it simply drives the stress deeper into the system. The dog may appear “calm” while internally remaining overwhelmed, hypervigilant, or emotionally shut down.

The work of Shaun Ellis and Kim Ellis has also helped challenge many of the myths humans have projected onto wolves and dogs. Shaun Ellis became known for his immersive work living alongside wolves, seeing their communication, relationships, social structures, and behaviour in ways that differed dramatically from traditional dominance narratives. Rather than seeing constant aggression and battles for status, the picture that emerged was one of deep social cooperation, communication, emotional sensitivity, and role-based functioning within the group.

Their work highlights something the dog world still struggles to fully accept: social mammals survive through connection far more than conflict.

Wolves do not spend their lives attempting to overpower one another at every opportunity. Stable groups rely on trust, communication, and cooperative functioning. Young wolves are guided through development. Adults can adapt behaviour according to the needs of the group. Emotional signals matter. Social harmony matters. Relationships matter.

Dogs have inherited these deeply social mammalian systems, even though domestication has shaped them in unique ways over thousands of years.

This is why behaviour cannot be reduced to obedience alone.

A dog pulling on the lead doesn’t need “leadership.” A reactive dog doesn’t need harsher correction. A dog growling over food is not “challenging authority.” Often these dogs are communicating emotional conflict, insecurity, developmental deficits, chronic stress, or survival responses that humans have failed to understand.

The tragedy of dominance theory is that it taught generations of people to see communication as confrontation.

It encouraged owners to overpower signals instead of listening to them.

It framed trust based relationships as weakness.

And in doing so, it disconnected people from the emotional reality of the animal standing in front of them.

When we move beyond dominance theory, we begin to see dogs differently. We stop asking, “How do I control this dog?” and start asking, “What is this dog experiencing?” We begin looking at development, attachment, nervous system regulation, social needs, genetics, emotional safety, and relationship dynamics. We begin recognising that behaviour is not about winning power struggles. It is about understanding the mammal underneath the behaviour.

And perhaps most importantly, we stop forcing dogs into a constant battle for rank that never truly existed in the first place.

Still a few spaces left 😀
20/05/2026

Still a few spaces left 😀

15/05/2026

Trusting the nose, building the agency. 🐾
As our searches get harder, we are shifting the responsibility to the dogs. This week was a masterclass in independent problem-solving.
We worked on specific exercises designed to encourage the dogs to find a scent and immediately move on to the next one, without needing any guidance or "re-starts" from their owners. It’s all about breaking the habit of returning to an old find and teaching them to trust that there is always more to discover.
Tonight’s Highlights:
• Corner Searching: Teaching the dogs to independently commit to and clear tight angles.
• The "Move On": Building the confidence to leave a find behind and cast off for a fresh source.
• The Garden Challenge: All that hard work clicked beautifully in the garden. Despite the complicated layout and shifting air, every dog worked systematically and pinpointed their hides with incredible accuracy.
A massive shout out to little Charlie, who was absolutely on fire this week! Watching that independent drive click into place is exactly why we do this. 🔥

09/05/2026

It’s been a long, quiet month since Ella was diagnosed with meningitis and polyarthritis. Watching her navigate the side effects of high-dose steroids has been tough, but we’ve finally hit a breakthrough with her new immunosuppressant protocol.

7 tablets a day is still the reality, but her energy is finally returning. We kept it simple today—an easy search to let her use her nose and regain some of that agency she’s been missing. No help, no lifting, just Ella doing what she does best. She’s still got it. 🐾

The Importance of Avoidance: Why Choice-Based Handling Saves LivesWhen we put a dog on a lead, we often inadvertently st...
04/05/2026

The Importance of Avoidance:
Why Choice-Based Handling Saves Lives
When we put a dog on a lead, we often inadvertently strip away their primary survival mechanism: the ability to move away. At Lucy and Olive Dog Training and Well-being, we believe lead work isn't about perfect heel positioning—it’s about maintaining a communication line where a dog’s choice to avoid a "scary" stimulus is respected.

Agency vs. Aggression: The Case of Olive at the Park
Imagine my dog, Olive, at the park when a group of children approaches without asking. To an observer, it’s a "cute" moment; to Olive, it’s an approach by unpredictable, fast-moving triggers.
Because Olive knows I respect her agency, she can perform a perfect avoidance sequence:

1. Lowering her body to process the pressure.
2. A sharp 180-degree turn away from the children.
3. A fast-paced exit to a safe distance.

By following Olive immediately, I confirm her trust. She doesn’t have to resort to a bark or a snap to save herself because she knows I am her reliable exit strategy.

The Biological Economy of Aggression

Aggression is evolutionarily "expensive" and risky. Most healthy dogs will choose flight over fight every single time—provided the human at the other end of the lead doesn't block the exit.
• Avoidance is a Skill: Encouraging a dog to walk away reinforces their confidence and prevents "Small Dog Syndrome" or reactive outbursts.
• Safety via Agency: A dog who knows they can leave a situation is a dog that rarely feels the need to bite.

The Professional Takeaway

• Prioritize the Dog's Perspective: If they think it’s scary, it is.
• Follow Their Cue: If they want to turn around, go with them.
• Ignore "Politeness": It is better to appear "rude" to a stranger than to force your dog into a confrontation.
Never block the exit. By allowing Olive to flee today, I ensure she won’t feel the need to fight tomorrow.

🐾 Lucy and Olive Dog Training and Well-being
Fostering agency, independence, and trust. 🐾☺️

24/04/2026

🐾 Scentwork in the Sunshine! ☀️
We traded the indoors for the fresh air this evening to make the most of the glorious weather!
Moving our searches outside adds a whole new layer of complexity. It was fascinating to observe how the dogs navigated the shifting dynamics of sun, shade, and wind. These environmental factors change how scent moves and settles, but every single dog handled the challenge beautifully.
Watching them work through the breeze and use their agency to problem-solve in a new environment is what it's all about. Great work to all our teams tonight!
Interested in joining a session?
📩 [email protected]
🌐 lucyandolivedogs.com
📞 07476168286

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Bishops Cleeve
GL528SQ

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