Games to play at home with your dog
During spells of hot weather, unless you're able to walk very early in the morning or late in the day, the temperature can make it too dangerous for your dog to be out walking at the time you would usually go. It can take just a few minutes in high temperatures for dogs to overheat, and this can quickly result in heatstroke, which can be fatal.
So, it's the perfect opportunity to have some fun at home with your dog! Having a chance to play games with you can be far more interesting for your dog for a change from your usual walk, and be a lot of fun for you both!
Watch our YouTube video for some great ideas!
The games that dogs really enjoy tap into their natural instincts and give them a chance to do the things they often don’t get a chance to do, but that make them far happier, healthier and content. This improves the dog/owner relationship and can help deal with a whole host of behaviour problems that so often come from boredom and frustration.
Getting started
Many games centre around how you feed your dog, or else them working out ways to get food. For most dogs, dinnertime is a pretty boring affair – and to realise why, think of how a dog originally was designed to find their next meal.
Virtually every waking minute would have been spent roaming around, scavenging and sniffing out food – in fact for a dog, it is practically a full-time job that would occupy them both physically and mentally for a major part of their day. Once they find their food they then have to work fairly hard to eat it as they would have to rip, tear and gnaw. Finding and eating dinner would provide a dog with virtually endless physical and mental stimulation - and allow them to satisfy their hard-wired instincts.
Compare this to how we feed our canine companions: Dinner served up on a plate and presented to the dog with no work needed at all, and in two mouthfuls, it’s gone. Ten seconds of frantic gulping rather than 14+ hours of engaging work – it doesn’t really compare. No wonder dogs get bored!
To transform your dog’s day, there are a large selection of games and activities you can add in to your daily routine that can enhance your dog’s meal times and make them last far longer - and better still, make you a key part of one of the best bits of your dog’s day.
There are plenty of interactive feeding toys on the market to provide great problem-solving tasks for dogs to work out. Start simple until your dog has got the hang of it - and then you can build up to the more fiendish if you find you’ve got a canine Einstein!
No need to spend money or leave the house
You don’t have to spend a fortune though, or even leave the house to shop. Try some of these DIY games with your dog:
- Put some food into an old toilet roll or kitchen towel roll and fold down the ends to give your dog a cheap interactive dog toy as they work out how to get the food out
- Put a few pieces of food into an old plastic drinks bottle and see if they can work out how to get them out
- Hide pieces of food under a towel or a plastic plant pot and let them work out how to get them
- Even simpler, and if you are not too garden-proud, you could just scatter your dog’s kibble around any shaded parts of your garden and let them sniff it out. This exercises a much-neglected canine sense, their fantastic nose, and for some breeds and types of dogs this can be a total transformative experience as they finally get to do what they were designed for!
Make sure all games are played in a cool and shady environment, are supervised and that everything you use is safe. Give your dog plenty of encouragement and work alongside them so it’s something you do together. Always make sure that plenty of fresh water is available and keep games short to ensure your dog does not get hot.
Enrichment toys
Alongside these interactive games, there are some enrichment toys that are more just for your dog. One of the best is the good old stuffed Kong toy - a strange-shaped, rubber chew-resistant toy that can be stuffed with food. Make sure the Kong you use is an original one and not a copy, is the right size for your dog, and start off making it easy for them to get the food out of so they understand how it works.
Once they have got the hang of it, you can make it far harder by packing the food in really tightly so they have to work hard to get it out - or you could put it in the freezer and freeze it so they have their own ice lolly!
While Kongs don't stimulate your dog’s hunting or scavenging behaviour, they do stimulate their gnawing and chewing behaviour. For dogs, the act of chewing and gnawing is a great stress buster too, so you are getting two benefits in one by giving your dog part of their daily food this way.
You could of course hide the Kongs in various places to be hunted down! Start by leaving them in plain sight, then hide them half under something – and then make it harder as your dog gets good at it. You may want to limit the rooms you do this in otherwise you will have a dog who endlessly hunts under everything and excavates rooms in the hope of finding a stuffed Kong!
The secret to successful dog games is to be inventive – as long as it is safe, anything goes! The other secret is to have as much fun in the hot weather as your dog does.
About the Author
Carolyn is an accredited behaviourist and trainer with over 20 years experience working with dogs and other companion animals. She has written books, over 800 published articles and trains owners and professionals alike, both nationally and internationally. She is currently the Chair of the UK Dog Behaviour and Training Charter. Carolyn is also an experienced broadcaster and presenter, has appeared in five TV series’ and countless radio shows. Her passion is for helping owners build a strong and positive relationship with the companion animals who share their lives, and fully develop the potential of the bond between them.
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