From your point of view, a trip to the park or round the block is no distance at all. It’s an easy walk, it will be fun to meet people and other dogs, and it’s necessary for your puppy’s education and growth. From your puppy’s point of view however, this is a bit like expecting a toddler to run a marathon!
Here’s why your pooch might be overwhelmed on their first puppy walk.
- Short legs mean it’s a much longer walk than you think it is
- When you are low to the ground, everything appears huge and intimidating – and don’t forget… it’s all new
- Overwhelming and totally new noises
- Overwhelming and totally new scents
- Overwhelming and totally new things to see
- They are constrained by the lead so they cannot choose where to go
- Expected to walk for a long time without a break at someone else’s pace which is far more tiring than stopping and starting at their own pace
- Unfamiliar surfaces and textures under their paws (tarmac, concrete, flagstones)
- Limited ability to communicate with you due to their age
- Limited ability to concentrate for the duration of the walk – all this novelty takes brain power
- And lack of training and puppy experience on how to walk on the lead. You can see our guide for help on this!
It’s easy to see how the walk you think will be fun, could be an epic test of endurance both mentally and physically for your puppy!
Equipment list for puppy’s first walks
Before you head off out into the great outdoors with your puppy, there’s some shopping you need to do in order to have all the things needed to ensure their future and first puppy walks are happy, comfortable, and safe. Here’s what you need:
Lightweight lead
This should be a soft training lead around 2m length as this will be long enough to practice training exercises (including recall) within the length of the lead, whilst still being easy to shorten when necessary. Make sure the weight of the lead and the clip are not too heavy or oversized for your puppy.
Securely fitting harness
There are a lot of harnesses about, however not all of them are good and of the good ones, not all will fit your puppy correctly. Harnesses should be of the stretchy vest type, or the Y front chest piece type, as these allow free movement of the shoulders and are reasonably secure (though any harness without a second girth strap can be backed out of by a very determined puppy, so if your puppy goes backwards fast, go with them don’t pull back on the lead!).
Avoid harnesses that use sliding straps that tighten up to discourage pulling and avoid any with a horizontal chest piece as these affect the movement of the shoulder joint which is obviously bad for a growing puppy.
Harnesses of the strap type should fit without being too close to your puppy’s armpit/elbow, and should fit snug around the ribcage, not sitting on the floating ribs right at the back, and not impeding breathing.
In a growing puppy you should check harness fit every few days as a harness that is too tight or pinches will really put your puppy off wearing it or even off walkies altogether!
Treat pouch
You can buy any number of these, or line an easy access coat pocket with a plastic bag. The main point is that you can easily grab a treat to reward something your puppy has done – even if unexpected - and are not fumbling around for ages. Your puppy has a short attention span and even with a marker such as a clicker or the word ‘yes’, will rapidly lose the connection between action and reward if you take too long to dig out a treat.
Suitable treats to reinforce behaviour
Dog treats for your puppy must be very small, very tasty, ideally soft or break down quickly – if your puppy is chewing away at a huge or hard treat, again there’s a good chance they’ve forgotten why they got it!
Treats can be delivered in a variety of ways too – you can give them from your fingers, though this may result in nipped fingers or a small puppy being encouraged to jump up to reach (or a bad back from constantly leaning down to give the treat), but you can also throw treats ahead or behind you, or drop treats, and you can offer a tube of cheese spread or doggy pate for your dog to lick direct from the tube. Try things out and see what works for you, and of course… your puppy has to really like the treats to start with!
Poo bags
These should be self-explanatory – always pick up poo!
Kitchen roll
It is not unusual that an excited, cheese filled puppy will do a soft, loose poo, and it always seems to be that poo will be right in someone’s gateway or the middle of the path, so a few squares of kitchen roll will make that mess much easier to clear up.
Bottle of water
This is for offering your puppy a drink but also can help with the aforementioned poo! A little rinse down after you’ve cleaned up with kitchen roll will help matters no end and avoid any irate neighbours.
Fold flat water dish
These are great and totally portable. Keep one in your bag, car, pocket… so much more convenient than trying to get your puppy to drink the dribble of water poured out of a water bottle. If you’re using lots of food rewards (and you should be) then your puppy may well need a drink - and it is hard to concentrate and learn if you’re thirsty.
Your vets’ number in your phone
There is no panic quite like being in the park with a puppy bleeding profusely from a cut pad, or some other veterinary drama, and realising you have no internet signal and don’t know the vets phone number!
With just these few items, you are ready to take on the world with your puppy! So, get out there and start having fun!