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LWDG POD DOG

LWDG POD DOG

By: The Ladies Working Dog Group
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Join us weekly as the LWDG Group and Guest Experts talk about all things working dog and gundog! Your weekly podcast for online and on air dog training. More about the LWDG: The LWDG supports ladies nationwide (and in other countries) with a wealth of support and information including masterclasses, featured expert support, training tips, and tools. With regular online coaching and meet-ups in our virtual 'Dog & Duck', these resources are aimed at supporting lady handlers to get the absolute best from their dogs whilst growing confidence and belief in themselves so that they can become a team. www.thelwdg.com© 2023 The Ladies Working Dog Group All Rights Reserved.
Episodes
  • 204. The Van, the GunDog, and All of Europe
    Mar 13 2026
    What if your dog didn’t have to stay home? What if the van, the open road, and your best mate could all go together — across the UK, across Europe, all the way to Croatia? This week I had the loveliest chat with Karen Shepherd, one of our brilliant Society members, who has been taking her Springer Spaniel McCoy all over Europe in her motor home. And I mean all over... Belgium, Croatia, Italy, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovenia. The dog has a better travel record than most people I know. Now you might know that Ali the campervan and I are very much looking forward to taking Arthur on our own adventures — once we’ve accepted that he has grown to the size of a small Shetland pony. So this conversation was, frankly, research. And it did not disappoint.In this episode we coverWhat campervan life with a gundog is really like — not the Instagram version, but the actual chaos and the joy of it. Why crate training was the single most important thing Karen did before their first trip. The honest truth about Brexit and what it means for anyone wanting to take their dog into Europe, including the animal health certificate versus getting a European pet passport — and why Karen got McCoy his passport in Bruges. The countries that are brilliant for dogs, the ones where you need a muzzle, and why Germany might just be the most dog-friendly place on earth. How to help your dog settle in a new environment every single night. What Karen wishes she’d known from the start. And the musical road in Hungary that is now firmly on my bucket list.The bit that stopped me in my tracksKaren said something that I keep coming back to. She talked about how all the different environments, the new smells, the new places, the constant low-level stimulation of life on the road, it all adds up to a dog that retires happy. Not a dog that’s been physically hammered into the ground, but a dog whose brain has been properly used. A dog that has genuinely lived his day.Sound familiar? That’s the Two Minds truth right there, just lived out on a campsite in Croatia.Useful linksAnimal Health Certificate (AHC) — GOV.UK guide to getting an AHC — required every time you leave the UK for Europe. Valid for 10 days from issue. Up to five pets can travel on one certificate.Taking your pet abroad (overview) — GOV.UK full pet travel guidance — the main hub for all UK pet travel rules, updated regularly.European Pet Passport — EU pet passport explained (PetAbroad) — once your dog has one, you no longer need a new AHC each trip. Must be issued by a European vet. McCoy’s was issued in Bruges.AHC explained in plain English — PassPets guide to Animal Health Certificates — a clear breakdown of the whole process, costs and what to prepare.Channel Tunnel with your dog — Eurotunnel LeShuttle pet travel page — the easiest crossing option as you stay in your vehicle throughout. 35 minutes, Folkestone to Calais.Tapeworm and country-specific rules — EU pet travel rules by country (Europa.eu) — muzzle laws, tapeworm requirements, and what differs country by country.Finding dog-friendly campsites across Europe — ACSI Campsites Europe app — the app Karen and many of our members use. Filter by dog-friendly, motorhome pitches, facilities. Available on iOS and Android.Karen’s top three things to have in place before your first tripA dog that travels well and is comfortable in a crate.A long line and a whistle — never leave home without them.Your paperwork sorted well in advance — the AHC requires a vet appointment, which means you need to know your travel dates ahead of time.If this has got you dreaming, good. That’s exactly what it’s supposed to do.We’d love to hear where you’ve taken your dog, or where you’re planning to go. Drop us a comment, come and share it in the community, and if you’ve enjoyed this episode please do leave us a review — it genuinely helps more women find us. See you in two weeks.Jo xThanks for joining us for this episode of Found It, Fetched It. Whether you’re just starting out or you’ve got muddy boots and a seasoned dog by your side, we’re here to walk the journey with you. We’re all about real talk, practical tips, and celebrating every little win—because in this world, progress isn’t always perfect, but it’s always worth it.💬 We’d love to hear from youGot a story to share, a question to ask, or just fancy saying hi? Come chat with us on socials or pop over to the website.📚 Want to go further with your training?Get our LWDG Gundog Progress Gap Map Work Out Where You Are, And What To Train Next !Want to know more about 🎓 The LWDG Society Expert-led courses, community support, and the kind of training that actually makes sense.📱 Stay connected with the pack:Website: ladiesworkingdoggroup.comFacebook: Ladies Working Dog GroupInstagram: @ladiesworkingdogs✨ And remember… Every session, every stumble, every breakthrough, it all counts. You’re not just ...
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    26 mins
  • 203. The Walk You've Been Avoiding Is Actually Your Best Training Session
    Feb 27 2026

    Does your heart sink every time a bird flushes, a squirrel darts across the path, or a dog bolts past on the beach? You're not alone. And you're definitely not ruining your dog.

    This week Joanne is joined by LWDG group expert Claire Denyer to tackle one of the biggest myths that keeps working dog owners stuck: that being around wildlife makes a high-drive dog harder to handle. It's actually the opposite.


    What you'll hear in this episode:

    • Why "my dog would be amazing, he chases everything" is the wrong way around and what gundog training really asks for
    • How seagulls, swans, and deer can become your most powerful free training tool, even if you never go near a shoot
    • Why avoiding difficult environments doesn't build confidence. It shrinks your dog's world and makes the problem worse
    • The real reason high-drive dogs chase bikes, cars, and cats, and what to do about it
    • Why a solid leave is the foundation of a dog you can take anywhere
    • Claire's honest account of working through her own dog Genie's fear and reactivity, because even professional trainers have those walks


    If you've been holding back from taking your dog somewhere because you don't trust what might happen, this episode will give you the framework to get back out there.


    The one thing to take away: Country walks, bird flushes, unexpected wildlife moments are not training setbacks. They are real life opportunities to show your dog that excitement and partnership can exist at the same time.


    Know someone who's convinced they're ruining their dog just by going on normal walks? Send them this one.

    Thanks for joining us for this episode of Found It, Fetched It. Whether you’re just starting out or you’ve got muddy boots and a seasoned dog by your side, we’re here to walk the journey with you. We’re all about real talk, practical tips, and celebrating every little win—because in this world, progress isn’t always perfect, but it’s always worth it.


    💬 We’d love to hear from you

    Got a story to share, a question to ask, or just fancy saying hi? Come chat with us on socials or pop over to the website.


    📚 Want to go further with your training?

    Get our LWDG Gundog Progress Gap Map Work Out Where You Are, And What To Train Next !


    Want to know more about 🎓 The LWDG Society

    Expert-led courses, community support, and the kind of training that actually makes sense.

    📱 Stay connected with the pack:

    Website: ladiesworkingdoggroup.com

    Facebook: Ladies Working Dog Group

    Instagram: @ladiesworkingdogs


    ✨ And remember… Every session, every stumble, every breakthrough, it all counts. You’re not just training a dog. You’re building trust, confidence, and a community that’s right behind you.

    Keep going. We see you. 💛

    Show more Show less
    31 mins
  • 202. When Ideology Gets in the Way of Training the Dog in Front of You
    Feb 13 2026

    Dog training advice is louder, more divided, and more confusing than ever.


    In this episode of Found It, Fetched It, Jo and Claire tackle one of the biggest problems facing dog owners today, rigid training ideologies that stop people from seeing and supporting the dog in front of them. From “never say no” to “only train this way”, they explore how blanket rules and online dogma leave handlers overwhelmed, hesitant, and often stuck with behaviours that could be resolved far more simply.


    Together they unpack:

    • Why training isn’t one-size-fits-all

    • How fear of “doing it wrong” is creating more stressed dogs and handlers

    • The difference between guidance and ideology

    • Why context, timing, and the individual dog always matter

    • How boundaries, communication, and reward work together

    • The real meaning behind training the dog in front of you


    Through honest conversation, humour, and real-life examples, this episode is about helping you step away from training pressure and start making confident, balanced decisions for your own dog.

    If you’ve ever felt stuck between conflicting advice, this one is for you.


    By the end of this episode, listeners will understand:

    • Training should always adapt to the individual dog and handler
    • Labels and training camps often oversimplify complex behaviour
    • Clear communication builds confidence in dogs
    • Reward and interruption both have a place when used appropriately
    • Dogs need guidance, not confusion or hesitation
    • Progress often comes from understanding motivation, timing, and consistency
    • Every dog’s journey will look different, and that’s normal

    Thanks for joining us for this episode of Found It, Fetched It. Whether you’re just starting out or you’ve got muddy boots and a seasoned dog by your side, we’re here to walk the journey with you. We’re all about real talk, practical tips, and celebrating every little win—because in this world, progress isn’t always perfect, but it’s always worth it.


    💬 We’d love to hear from you

    Got a story to share, a question to ask, or just fancy saying hi? Come chat with us on socials or pop over to the website.


    📚 Want to go further with your training?

    Get our LWDG Gundog Progress Gap Map Work Out Where You Are, And What To Train Next !


    Want to know more about 🎓 The LWDG Society

    Expert-led courses, community support, and the kind of training that actually makes sense.

    📱 Stay connected with the pack:

    Website: ladiesworkingdoggroup.com

    Facebook: Ladies Working Dog Group

    Instagram: @ladiesworkingdogs


    ✨ And remember… Every session, every stumble, every breakthrough, it all counts. You’re not just training a dog. You’re building trust, confidence, and a community that’s right behind you.

    Keep going. We see you. 💛

    Show more Show less
    39 mins
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I have been born and raised with dogs and a wide variety of critters. I have been married 7 years the 11th. and I have had the 3 best dogs I have ever had. I worked studied and learned with each of my boys. Each one did his own thing and I was safe confident and we learned something new every day. last Thursday we went to dinner ND left all 4 pups in fenced 1 acre as we do when it's nice. we can home less then 2 hours later and 2 of my boys was dead. they killed one another. I am lost. my old pup is depressed too. I know better then to get another. I have my 12ye Male shep and our 19week old Mutt pup. she was with them she wasnt hurt. I need to boost her confidence and show her it will be ok . what training tips should I do with her to stimulate her mind the most?? Howling Hugs and Belly rubs from Me,Princeton and Judy Jane

I enjoy listening and learning from Kansas USA

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