Walk This Way

Walk This Way Experienced dog walker and pet carer
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pet sitting day and overnight
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If you’re looking for a great local festival check this out!If u book using this link and use DEBBIE7775 in the coupon c...
26/04/2026

If you’re looking for a great local festival check this out!
If u book using this link and use DEBBIE7775 in the coupon code to get discount


Join us 31 July – 2 August 2026 for the sixth year of Good Vibrations Society: a 3-day festival of music, wellbeing and ecology, set in the magical surroundings of the Ashdown Forest.

My boy!
13/04/2026

My boy!

13/04/2026
Great day at the southern border collie champ and open show! He won all his classes!
12/04/2026

Great day at the southern border collie champ and open show! He won all his classes!

Woodland walks, dogs in treesWalk This Way
01/04/2026

Woodland walks, dogs in treesWalk This Way

09/01/2026

NEW DOG LEGISLATION EXPLAINED

Important new legislation⚠️

Important to read if you own or walk dogs, as well as if you'd like to know your rights as a livestock owner!

UK law is being significantly updated in England and Wales through the new "Dogs (Protection of Livestock) (Amendment) Bill" to tackle dog attacks on livestock, including horses!

The new legislation has just been given final approval by the House of Lords, allowing it to be sent to the King for Royal Assent and finally being enshrined on the Statute Book.

Here is an overview of the changes....

Dog owners & walkers: livestock worrying law important update

The law on dogs and livestock worrying has recently been updated in Britain. These changes matter and they apply even on public footpaths and rights of way.

This post explains:

• what has changed

• what counts as evidence

• what “under proper control” actually means

• whether seized dogs are killed

What has changed in the law

The Dogs (Protection of Livestock) legislation has been modernised. Key points:

➡️ Unlimited fines

The old £1,000 cap has gone. Courts can now impose unlimited fines reflecting the real harm caused.

➡️ More animals protected

'Livestock' now clearly includes alpacas and llamas, as well as sheep, cattle, goats, pigs and others.

➡️ More places covered

The law applies:

– in fields and enclosures

– on public footpaths

– on roads

– while livestock are being moved

➡️ Stronger police powers

Police can now:

– seize and detain dogs

– enter premises with a warrant

– collect forensic evidence

🔴 Worrying vs attacking livestock

This is crucial.

➡️ 'Worrying livestock' includes:

• chasing

• running at

• harassing

• causing fear or panic

• being loose among livestock and not under proper control

No injury or physical contact is needed.

Stress alone is legally recognised harm. It can cause:

• miscarriages

• mis-mothering

• exhaustion

• broken limbs from fleeing

• long-term fear responses

➡️ Attacking livestock involves:

• biting

• grabbing

• injuring

• killing

⚠️Both worrying and attacking are criminal offences.⚠️

What counts as evidence now…

Livestock worrying often happens out of sight. The law now reflects that.

🔴 Evidence may include:

• Injuries to livestock (including stress-related harm)

• Bite marks, wounds, post-mortems

• Blood, tissue, or DNA

• Evidence from the dog (blood, saliva, bite patterns)

• Collars, leads, towels or other items

• Disturbed ground, damaged fencing

• Witness statements

• Livestock behaviour (panic, scattering, distress)

• The dog itself, which may be seized for examination

⚠️ A case does not need someone to witness the moment of chasing if evidence supports what happened.⚠️

What “under proper control” REALLY means

This is the most misunderstood part of the law.

🔴 A dog is under proper control only if the handler can PREVENT it from worrying livestock at all times.

That means the handler must be able to:

• stop the dog before it approaches livestock

• prevent any chasing or rushing

• act instantly not “afterwards”

• maintain control even if animals move or run

If the dog is stopped after it has approached or chased livestock, control was already lost.

➡️ On a lead

A dog on a lead is usually under control only if

• the lead is short enough

• the handler can physically restrain the dog

• the handler is paying attention

Flexi leads, long lines, or dragging leads in livestock areas are often not considered proper control.

➡️ Off lead

A dog can be under proper control off lead but the bar is very high.

If a dog:

• runs towards livestock

• hesitates before recall

• “only chases for a bit”

• comes back after animals flee
.......it is not under proper control.

“Friendly”, “well trained”, or “never done it before” makes no difference in law.

⚠️NB Presence alone can be an offence⚠️

A loose dog among livestock, fence-running, or stalking can already count as worrying, even without a chase.

The law is about risk and stress, not intent.

A practical rule used in policing: If a reasonable livestock keeper would feel at risk with that dog there, it is not under proper control.

⚠️ Are seized dogs killed?⚠️

No not usually, dogs are not automatically destroyed under livestock worrying law.

Dogs may be seized:

• to prevent repeat incidents

• to gather evidence

• during investigation

Courts usually focus on owner responsibility, not punishing the dog. Destruction orders are rare and would only arise under other legislation if a dog posed an unmanaged, serious risk.

In short

⚠️ Livestock do not need to be bitten for an offence

⚠️ Stress and chasing are recognised harm

⚠️ Evidence can be physical and forensic

⚠️ “Proper control” means preventing risk, not recalling afterwards

⚠️ Responsibility rests with the handler

🔴 Please feel free to share as clarity prevents heartbreak. 🔴

*This post is a general summary of current UK livestock-worrying law and practice, based on publicly available legislation and guidance. It is not legal advice and cannot account for individual circumstances.

28/12/2025

My Christmas photos of all the doggies I walk for my clients!

Congratulations to my beautiful daughter jodie and her husband Alec who got married November 13th in las Vegas! Can’t wa...
17/11/2025

Congratulations to my beautiful daughter jodie and her husband Alec who got married November 13th in las Vegas! Can’t wait to see u both in December xx

Some of the lovely dogs I get to walk! I’ve got the best job!🐾
16/10/2025

Some of the lovely dogs I get to walk! I’ve got the best job!🐾

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Edenbridge
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