Guns and Noses

Helen Taylor

Hosted by Helen, a force-free gundog and pet-dog trainer, this podcast is a place to slow down, reflect, and feel supported on your training journey. Through real stories from the field, honest observations, and the occasional cheeky Labrador moment, we talk about what dog training really looks like - the wins, the wobbles, and everything in between. For owners of enthusiastic dogs who want kind, evidence-based training without judgement. No shame. No force. No perfection - just learning, laughter, and a community that gets it.

  1. 2 days ago

    Could your home be making your dog more reactive?

    Have you ever noticed that your dog seems perfectly settled out on a walk but turns into the neighbourhood watch the moment they're at home? In this episode, we're exploring something that many owners never even consider... acoustics. Your home doesn't just look different to your dog—it sounds different too. Every room reflects noise differently, from hard flooring and bare walls to high ceilings and open-plan living. Those sounds can amplify barking, increase vigilance, and make your dog feel like they need to respond to every little noise. We'll cover:• Why dogs hear things long before we do.• How echoes and sound reflections can increase arousal.• Why some rooms trigger barking more than others.• The difference between a dog being "naughty" and a dog responding to their environment.• Simple changes you can make at home to create a calmer, quieter space. If your dog seems reactive in the house but much calmer elsewhere, this episode could completely change the way you see their behaviour. Sometimes the answer isn't more training... it's changing the environment your dog is trying to cope with. If you'd like more support, join the Insiders Club for exclusive access to extra resources, expert talks, and helpful content designed to support you and your dog. And if you'd prefer tailored advice for your own home and your own dog, you can also book a Zoom consult with me for personalised support. Insider Club | Guns and NosesPrivate 1:1 Training | Guns and NosesHelen xx

    11 min
  2. 9 Jun

    The Jump-Sit Cycle: Why Your Dog Keeps Jumping Up

    One of the most common training mistakes I see isn't a lack of training—it's accidentally rewarding the very behaviour people are trying to stop. Picture the scene. Your dog jumps up at you. You tell them to sit. They sit. You reward them. Sounds reasonable, doesn't it? The problem is that your dog doesn't necessarily see it the same way. What many dogs see is: Jump up → Sit down → Get rewarded The jumping up becomes part of the chain that leads to the reward. So next time they want a reward, attention, or interaction, what do they do? They jump up again. After all, that's how the sequence starts. This is what I call the Jump-Sit Cycle. Owners often think they're rewarding the sit because that's the behaviour happening immediately before the reward. But from the dog's perspective, the entire sequence may be linked together. Imagine if every time you wanted a biscuit, you had to touch the wall first. Before long, touching the wall would become part of the process of earning the biscuit. Dogs are no different. The answer isn't to stop rewarding sits. The answer is to stop making the sit happen after the unwanted behaviour. Instead, look for opportunities to reward before the jump occurs. Approach your dog when all four paws are on the floor and reward that. Ask visitors to only interact when the dog remains grounded. Reward calm approaches. Reward standing politely. Reward the behaviours you actually want to see repeated. If your dog does jump up, avoid turning it into a training exercise where jumping is the first step and sitting is the second. Simply remove attention, reset the situation, and wait for the behaviour you'd like before rewarding. Remember, dogs learn in sequences. The question isn't just "What am I rewarding?" It's "What behaviour does my dog think earned the reward?" Understanding that difference can completely change your training results. Helen x

    13 min

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About

Hosted by Helen, a force-free gundog and pet-dog trainer, this podcast is a place to slow down, reflect, and feel supported on your training journey. Through real stories from the field, honest observations, and the occasional cheeky Labrador moment, we talk about what dog training really looks like - the wins, the wobbles, and everything in between. For owners of enthusiastic dogs who want kind, evidence-based training without judgement. No shame. No force. No perfection - just learning, laughter, and a community that gets it.

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