Pawsome Partners

Pawsome Partners IMDT/IMDTB/EPPS accredited dog trainer in West End, Southampton. I specialise in puppy training & pet gundog training at my 15-acre facility.

Offering a holistic, positive reinforcement approach to dog behaviour & training in small groups or 1:1.

Sometimes walking a dog who struggles with focus can feel incredibly isolating. If you're looking for a bit of company, ...
02/06/2026

Sometimes walking a dog who struggles with focus can feel incredibly isolating. If you're looking for a bit of company, some guidance and a way to practice walking with others in a calm and sensible way, come join Pack Walks with Callum.

Our small Sunday morning groups are perfect for owners who want to build their confidence while their dogs practice walking neutrally around others. No pressure, no judgment, just good company, good practice and on the spot advice whenever you need it.

This is a five-week programme. The first walk will be held at the Pawsome Partners training venue, with future walks held elsewhere.

All dogs will be walked on long lines and walks will last around 45 minutes to one hour.

If this sounds helpful for you and your dog, please register your interest at [email protected]

Reward schedules are really about communication...Reward schedules are not really about food.They are about communicatio...
08/05/2026

Reward schedules are really about communication...

Reward schedules are not really about food.

They are about communication.

They tell the dog what worked, help create clarity, and make learning easier to understand. Used thoughtfully, they help build confidence, reliability, and a much fairer training picture for both ends of the lead.

The goal is not to stop rewarding.

The goal is to reinforce in a way that makes sense for the dog, the behaviour, and the environment you are training in.

That is where good training lives.

Rewards do not disappear, they evolve...At some point, people often ask when they should stop rewarding.The honest answe...
05/05/2026

Rewards do not disappear, they evolve...

At some point, people often ask when they should stop rewarding.

The honest answer is that rewards do not really disappear. They evolve.

As training progresses, reinforcement may shift from food to play, praise, movement, sniffing, retrieving, or access to the environment. That is not the same as removing reinforcement altogether. It is just changing what payment looks like.

A dog that recalls and then gets sent back to explore has still been rewarded.

A dog that walks nicely and gets to move forward has still been rewarded.

It does not always have to be sausage. But it does still need to matter to the dog.

Real life changes the training pictureReward schedules do not exist in a little bubble.What works in the house may not w...
01/05/2026

Real life changes the training picture

Reward schedules do not exist in a little bubble.

What works in the house may not work nearly as well out on a walk, around other dogs, near wildlife, or anywhere your dog finds more exciting than you.

That is not your dog failing. It is information.

It tells us the picture has changed and our reinforcement may need to change with it.

A dog that can recall beautifully in the garden may still need much better pay outdoors. A dog that can walk nicely at home may need far more support in a busy environment.

Real life matters. Good training takes that into account.

29/04/2026
Variable and intermittent rewards are not the same...Variable rewards and intermittent rewards are often talked about as...
28/04/2026

Variable and intermittent rewards are not the same...

Variable rewards and intermittent rewards are often talked about as though they are the same thing, but they are not.

Variable reinforcement is still thoughtful. The behaviour is already well understood, the dog still gets feedback, and reinforcement is still part of the picture. It is just not happening every single time.

Intermittent reinforcement is usually much less clear. It often ends up meaning the dog is rewarded now and then, with bigger gaps between feedback.

That difference matters.

One can help maintain strong behaviour. The other can slowly chip away at it if the picture becomes too thin or too unclear.

Fixed rewards are a vital part of the teaching process.A fixed reward schedule simply means the dog is rewarded every ti...
24/04/2026

Fixed rewards are a vital part of the teaching process.

A fixed reward schedule simply means the dog is rewarded every time they get the behaviour right.

This is the teaching phase.

It is where the dog learns what the exercise actually means, what earns reinforcement, and how to get it right with confidence. It is not about testing whether they can do it without food yet. It is about building the behaviour properly in the first place.

A dog being rewarded clearly in the learning stage is not becoming spoiled. They are learning the rules of the game.

That is exactly what we want.

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West End
West End

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