Why Dogs Ignore You on Walks
By Pentlands Dog Training
If you’ve ever wondered why dogs ignore you on walks and found yourself shouting their name across a field while they pretend they’ve gone deaf, you’re not alone.
It usually starts so well. You get your puppy at eight weeks and they’re your shadow. They stick close, check-in and look to you for everything. You feel smug. “Recall? Nailed it.”
Then they hit adolescence. Their confidence grows, their nose switches on and suddenly they’ve got better things to do.
Nothing’s gone wrong! This is completely normal. It’s a mix of maturity, confidence and genetics coming to the surface. The problem is what happens next: we humans get complacent.
The dog trots around happily, never strays far, so we relax. We pop in headphones, chat to friends and enjoy the peace. Until the day our dog buggers off after a rabbit and doesn’t come back. Then its “Bad dog!”
But what’s really happened is simple. The dog’s been self-employed for months and we didn’t notice.
Why Dogs Ignore Recall and Run Off
Dogs are opportunists. If you don’t give them a job, they’ll find one. And their new line of work is usually entertainment: racing off to meet other dogs, chasing joggers, rabbits, birds, cars, or just digging up half a golf course.
Somewhere along the way, we stopped engaging with them. No play, no training, no connection, just a nice wander.
For the dog it’s a walk with wages: total freedom and zero responsibility.
Common Reasons Dogs Stop Listening
Why do dogs ignore you on walks?
Dogs that ignore you aren’t being stubborn or dominant; they’re simply doing what pays better.
You versus the environment? The environment wins.
Most dogs have learned that when they hear you call, it means “fun’s over.” Recall becomes a cue for disappointment.
There’s also the boredom factor. Many dogs get mentally under-stimulated on “easy” walks where we just trail behind them. They switch off because we have and it’s no surprise that recall collapses when a pheasant explodes out of a hedge.
And here’s another truth: too much off-lead freedom, too soon, creates bad habits. A dog who’s been allowed to make their own decisions in distracting places will struggle to suddenly hand that power back.
How to Rebuild Recall and Attention on Walks
You don’t fix this by shouting louder. You fix it by becoming worth listening to again. That starts with engagement. Recall and focus is about your relationship with your dog, both in and outdoors.
Bring something to the walk. Treats, toys, enthusiasm; whatever your dog finds motivating. I don’t mean chucking a ball until they’re dizzy. Interactive play matters more: tug games, hiding a toy or dummy for them to find or short retrieves where they bring the toy back to you, not just launch into orbit with it.
Make yourself the best part of the walk. Mix food rewards with play. Use a jackpot when they come flying back to you, like lots of roast chicken or a game of tug. Practice short bursts of recall when it’s quiet then build up gradually as distractions increase.
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Pattern Games & Obedience That Help With Recall and Focus
Pattern games like “1-2-3” or “This Way” can work wonders for dogs who have learned to tune you out. They create predictability, calmness and focus. Sprinkle them through your walk, especially before the environment gets too exciting. You’re teaching your dog that paying attention pays better than disappearing
Using a Long Line to Improve Recall Safely
If your dog has already learned to self-reward, meaning the thrill of the chase or exploring beats coming back, then you’ll need management.
Use a long line until recall is solid. It keeps everyone safe and gives you a chance to train and rebuild trust safely.
You can still give them freedom in a secure area or a run-free field of which there are plenty near me in West Lothian and lots more near Edinburgh.
Let Dogs Sniff and Explore Without Losing Focus
Don’t turn the whole walk, every walk into a training session. Let them sniff, explore and decompress. Just make sure you’re part of that world.
Don’t walk the dog, walk with your dog.
If your dog thinks you’re just a background extra they’ll edit you out of the scene entirely.
Final Thoughts: Make Yourself Worth Listening To
So now you know why dogs ignore you on walks; they’re not being bad, they’re being a dog who has learned that life can be fun without you. Your job is to make life with you the better deal.
Start small, reward big, keep it interesting and remember: Recall isn’t a command, it’s co-operation that you build through trust and reward and lots of fun.
Its a conversation you have with your dog; Make sure yours is worth listening to