Callington Dog Grooming Services

Callington Dog Grooming Services Highly qualified, professional, safe and caring dog grooming, with excellent customer service.

Shared from another salon 👍🏻😊
21/03/2026

Shared from another salon 👍🏻😊

Thrilled that my Oz ( Ch Catachgorm Checkmate by Dogazza A.I ) will be representing the Kerry Blues in the 2026 Native V...
03/03/2026

Thrilled that my Oz ( Ch Catachgorm Checkmate by Dogazza A.I ) will be representing the Kerry Blues in the 2026 Native Vulnerable Breeds Grand Final on Friday at Crufts 👍🏻

The invitation was because he was Best Opposite S*x at National Terrier 2025.

Super proud to be escorting this lovely dog of mine into the big ring….😊

Apparently it’s televised so keep an eye out on the Crufts coverage…..and please send good luck wishes to us for Friday ❤️☘️

Wishing all our fantastic customers and your wonderful dogs a very happy Christmas and a peaceful New Year 😊Thank you fo...
23/12/2025

Wishing all our fantastic customers and your wonderful dogs a very happy Christmas and a peaceful New Year 😊

Thank you for your custom and loyalty to us this year ……see you all in 2026 ❤️

16/12/2025

Excellent article copied from a dog training page that I follow …well worth a read 👍🏻

Social Maturity……..When Your Dog Decides the World Is Not a Playground

There comes a moment in every dog’s life when they wake up and think:

“Actually… I don’t like everyone.”

Welcome to social maturity.

For owners, handlers, and trainers alike, this is one of the most misunderstood, mislabelled, and emotionally charged phases in a dog’s development. It’s also the point where many dogs are unfairly branded as reactive, dominant, aggressive, or needing more socialisation, when in reality they’re simply growing up.

Let’s break it down properly, what social maturity really is, how it affects dogs, when it shows up, what can go wrong, and how to handle it without losing your mind (or your dog’s reputation at the park).

What Is Social Maturity in Dogs?

Social maturity is the stage in a dog’s development where they move from juvenile, socially tolerant behaviour to adult, selective social behaviour.

In plain English:
• Puppies and adolescents tend to be socially promiscuous
• Adults become socially selective

A socially mature dog no longer feels the need to:
• Greet every dog
• Play with every dog
• Tolerate rude dogs
• Put up with poor canine manners
• Be everyone’s best mate

This isn’t a failure of training.
It’s normal biological development.

Social maturity is driven by:
• Neurological development
• Hormonal changes
• Emotional regulation
• Experience and learning
• Genetics and breed purpose

It is not something you “train out” of a dog, nor should you.

When Does Social Maturity Happen?

This is where people often get caught out.

Social maturity does not arrive neatly on a birthday.

Rough guide:
• Small breeds: 12–18 months
• Medium breeds: 18–24 months
• Large & working breeds: 24–36 months (sometimes later)

And yes, this is why:
• “He was fine until he turned two”
• “She suddenly doesn’t like other dogs”
• “Nothing changed except his age”

Because something did change:
Your dog’s brain finally caught up with its body.

What Does Social Maturity Look Like?

Social maturity rarely announces itself politely.

It tends to arrive with behaviours such as:
• Reduced interest in random dogs
• Avoidance of boisterous or rude dogs
• Clear boundary-setting (growling, snapping, posturing)
• Frustration when forced into close contact
• Less tolerance for adolescent nonsense
• Increased confidence in saying “no”

This is often mistaken for:
• Reactivity
• Aggression
• Poor socialisation
• Training failure

In reality, it’s often improved social awareness.

Your dog hasn’t become worse.
They’ve become honest.

Why Do So Many Dogs “Change” at Social Maturity?

Because puppyhood lies.

Puppies:
• Are hard-wired to be socially forgiving
• Avoid conflict at almost all costs
• Tolerate behaviour they wouldn’t accept as adults

Adult dogs:
• Value personal space
• Expect appropriate social signals
• Have opinions
• Enforce boundaries

Think of it like this:

A puppy is the dog equivalent of a toddler at a soft-play centre.
An adult dog is someone trying to do the weekly shop in Tesco on a Saturday afternoon.

Same species.
Very different tolerance levels.

Is There Any Fallout From Social Maturity?

There can be, but the fallout doesn’t come from social maturity itself.

It comes from how humans respond to it.

Common Human Errors
• Forcing dog-dog interactions
• Labeling normal boundaries as “bad behaviour”
• Flooding dogs with social exposure
• Punishing communication (growls)
• Over-socialising instead of teaching neutrality
• Continuing off-lead chaos “because they used to love it”

This is how normal social maturity turns into:
• Reactivity
• Frustration-based aggression
• Defensive behaviour
• Learned helplessness
• Suppressed communication followed by explosions

The dog isn’t broken.
The expectations are.

Social Maturity vs Reactivity: Not the Same Thing

This is critical.

A socially mature dog:
• May not want interaction
• Can disengage when allowed
• Uses appropriate distance-increasing signals
• Is often calm once space is respected

A reactive dog:
• Is emotionally overwhelmed
• Struggles to disengage
• Reacts explosively to triggers
• Is often stuck in chronic stress

Social maturity can look reactive when:
• The dog is repeatedly put in situations they don’t want
• The handler ignores early warning signs
• Space is not advocated for

Respect the maturity, and many “reactive” dogs magically improve.

Funny that.

Breed Matters (A Lot)

Some breeds mature socially earlier and harder than others.

Common examples:
• Shepherds
• Malinois
• Akitas
• Mastiffs
• Bull breeds
• Livestock guardians
• Protection and guarding lines

These dogs were never bred to be dog-park butterflies.

Expecting lifelong sociability from genetically selective breeds is like being disappointed that a Border Collie won’t switch off at a picnic.

Biology always wins.

How Do You Know Your Dog Is Socially Mature?

Signs your dog has “arrived”:
• They prefer neutrality over interaction
• They disengage rather than escalate (if allowed)
• They are confident, not fearful
• They choose space, not chaos
• They are more focused on their handler than other dogs
• They tolerate known dogs but avoid unknown ones

This is not antisocial behaviour.
It’s adult behaviour.

What Should We Be Aiming For Instead?

Not sociability.

Neutrality.

A socially mature, well-trained dog should:
• Walk past other dogs calmly
• Ignore environmental noise
• Focus on their handler
• Engage by choice, not compulsion
• Have permission to say “no”

Neutrality is the gold standard, not friendliness.

Friendly dogs get you likes on Instagram.
Neutral dogs get you peace.

The Big Takeaway

Social maturity is not a problem.
It is not a diagnosis.
It is not a failure.
It is not something to “fix”.

It is a natural developmental stage that requires:
• Adjusted expectations
• Better advocacy
• Clear boundaries
• Structure
• Leadership
• Respect for the dog in front of you

If your dog has stopped loving every dog they meet, congratulations.

They’ve grown up.

And frankly, so should we.

10/12/2025

People who show their dogs, especially if they own a trimmed breed, take years and years of practice, failure, repetition and hard work, to get somewhere near perfecting their craft…..and actually perfection doesn’t exist. There’s always something to improve or correct or change.

In a professional grooming salon like Callington Dog Grooming, I do a few show dogs for exhibitors, but not many. I concentrate on my own dogs.

What we constantly strive to achieve is top-drawer grooming for your dogs, with health and welfare as our priority ……this comes before the pretty shapes and styles….our goal is to give you both, but welfare and health will always come first.

Please be wary of people who tell you though, that they can “ do a show trim “……usually new groomers….unless they’re at it all the time, I think you’ll be disappointed 😞

Westie bum ❤️
23/10/2025

Westie bum ❤️

Goodnight my beautiful Rosa……you lost the battle in the end but were a terrier until the last…..I saw you into the world...
23/10/2025

Goodnight my beautiful Rosa……you lost the battle in the end but were a terrier until the last…..I saw you into the world and helped you to leave it…..you truly will be missed ######

Fabulous Fergus the Irish Setter ❤️All trimmed up and ready for his show tomorrow……good luck fella 🤞🏻😊
26/09/2025

Fabulous Fergus the Irish Setter ❤️

All trimmed up and ready for his show tomorrow……good luck fella 🤞🏻😊

02/09/2025

We are a very busy salon and are generally fully booked for 2 months ahead……..and I am very appreciative of every one of our loyal clients.

I’m a little taken aback at the attitude of a few clients recently who were very put out because I can’t fit their dogs in immediately.

When clients collect their dogs they are always advised to rebook so that can have an appointment that’s convenient for them ……..if they don’t rebook they take the chance of not being able to get back in with us for between 6 and 8 weeks.

I understand that time goes by and that life can get in the way, but we can’t be in the salon 7 days a week, 24 hours a day.

We keep a cancellation list and sometimes an appointment will become available, but we can’t always guarantee that a slot will come up at a convenient time.

So please try to remember to book your next appointment when you collect your dogs from us…..this applies all year round and especially in the run up to Christmas 🤶

Thank you 😊

Hand strip started on this lovely Border Terrier ❤️
28/08/2025

Hand strip started on this lovely Border Terrier ❤️

Handsome Humphrey……no words needed ❤️
09/08/2025

Handsome Humphrey……no words needed ❤️

Address

The Engine House, Compton Park, Florence Road, Kelly Bray
Callington
PL178EA

Opening Hours

Tuesday 9:30am - 5pm
Wednesday 9:30am - 5pm
Thursday 9:30am - 5pm
Friday 9:30am - 5pm
Saturday 9:30am - 5pm

Telephone

+441579383004

Website

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