The Spaniel Trust - Rehabilitating, Retraining & Fostering Rescued Spaniels

                                                

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The Spaniel Trust
aCharity registered in Scotland
SC038987

Devoted to the rehabilitation, retraining and rehoming of rescue spaniels and education of their owners

Like all working dogs,  spaniels are extremely active and have a very busy mindset, which can cause  problems, as that doesn’t often fit in well with modern lifestyles!  We now  live in a throwaway society where money is easy come by; sadly dogs like any  other purchase have become disposable commodities.  Most of the dogs we  receive for rehab at the Spaniel Trust have been rejected by their human  family for behavioural issues, but in my opinion it is the dog that should  have rejected its owners, for boring the animal senseless through lack of  stimulation, treating it like an ornament or human rather than a dog, or for  wanting a status symbol which they then failed to maintain either by care or  training!   The dogs arriving here at ST for rehabilitation and re-homing are  almost always extremely stressed, often very confused, many are under threat  of destruction for aggression, and some are traumatised by beatings.  Some  have been through the rescue process before, some take weeks to relax,  understand, enjoy life and then become much more confident dogs.  They are  all individuals, each treatment and assessment will be different from the  next.

You might wonder how  this situation comes about; in most cases it starts when people buy a puppy  as a family pet.  Families rarely research the breed properly before buying,  often a pup is bought on a whim and that’s the first problem, some breeds  like spaniels need lots of things to do, he will not sit happily in his  basket for hours.  Young puppies, like young children, are always very  inquisitive and can be extremely destructive.  Why people would think a puppy  should arrive “ready trained for the home” like an oven ready turkey, never  fails to amaze me.  You wouldn’t expect a baby to be potty or toilet trained  from birth, so why shout at a puppy if it soils or wets the floor?  You  wouldn’t expect a baby or young child to be safe around electrical cables or  goods, nor would you leave the “best” stuff out in their vicinity, or the  paperwork you brought home from the office.  So why would you expect a puppy  to leave the electric cables, your paperwork or best china intact?

Like all young animals  they have to be taught, as we do or should do with our children.  In the  wild, the pack who are all members of the dog’s extended family, would teach  the youngster what was expected of him.

as  we have taken him away from his family it is our responsibility to take on  that role.

Most of the early  problems with youngsters we see up for re-homing are down to owners being  downright lazy and not training the puppy or taking him to training classes!   If you want the best out you have to put the effort in, there are no short  cuts.  If you can’t commit the time to train your pup, can’t be bothered or  expect it to be as easy to train as a robot, then put simply - please don’t  get a dog at all, spaniel or any other breed!



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