English Springer Spaniel running back to owner on a park path during recall training

Off The Lead: Why Your Dog Ignores You Outside

If your dog comes back beautifully in the kitchen but suddenly develops selective hearing at the park, you are not alone.

Outside, your dog is not being difficult for the sake of it. The world is louder, smellier and far more exciting than your living room. Other dogs, birds, people, food smells and open space can all compete with you.

A better recall usually starts with two things: making the reward worth coming back for, and practising in a way your dog can actually succeed.

Why recall falls apart outdoors

Recall is not just a command. It is a trade. You are asking your dog to leave something interesting and choose you instead. If the reward is always the same biscuit they get for sitting at home, it may not be strong enough for the job.

This is where reward value matters. Everyday rewards are useful for easy training, while higher-value rewards are best saved for harder moments such as recall, emergency check-ins and distracting environments.

At-home check

If your dog hears their name or recall cue ten times before anything good happens, the cue can start to lose meaning. Fewer repetitions, better timing and better rewards usually help.

What makes a good recall reward?

  • Small: Tiny pieces let you reward often without overdoing portions.
  • Easy to eat: Soft or bite-sized rewards keep the rhythm moving.
  • Interesting: Rotate flavours and textures so the reward stays meaningful.
  • Reserved for harder work: Keep special rewards for outside practice, not all-day snacking.

If treat amounts are already creeping up, read our guide on whether you are giving your dog too many treats before adding more.

Reward ideas for outdoor training

These options all suit slightly different jobs. Think about what your dog finds motivating, and choose rewards that can be portioned sensibly.

Charlie and Cookie Co training treats

Everyday practice

C&C Training Treats

Small natural rewards for recall foundations, check-ins and short training sessions.

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Anco Nibbles training treats for dogs

Soft little pieces

Anco Nibbles Training Treats

Handy for repeat rewards when you are building reliable outdoor habits.

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Waita freeze dried chicken cubes for dogs

Higher value

Waita Freeze-Dried Chicken Cubes

A useful special reward for harder practice when distractions are higher.

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Charlie and Cookie Co premium Baltic sprats dog treats

Very motivating

C&C Premium Baltic Sprats

A fishy option to save for moments where you need the reward to really matter.

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A simple recall reset

  1. Choose one recall cue and stop repeating it casually all day.
  2. Practise at home first with easy wins.
  3. Move to the garden, then quiet outdoor spaces.
  4. Reward immediately when your dog turns back to you.
  5. Release them back to sniffing when it is safe, so recall does not always mean fun ends.

For some dogs, a long line and professional trainer support can be really helpful. Avoid practising off lead in unsafe places until recall is reliable.

Common mistakes

  • Only calling when it is time to leave: Your dog learns that coming back ends the fun.
  • Using low-value rewards in high-value places: Park distractions need better pay.
  • Getting cross when they return: Even a slow return should lead to calm, positive handling.
  • Practising when the environment is too hard: Start easier and build up.

FAQs

Should I use treats every time?

At the learning stage, frequent rewards help. Over time you can mix food rewards with praise, play and release back to safe sniffing.

What if my dog is not food motivated outside?

Try practising in easier places first and experiment with reward types. Some dogs prefer play, movement, sniffing or higher-value food outdoors.

Can I use pate for recall?

Yes, some owners slice JR Pet Products Pure Pate into tiny cubes for training. Keep portions small and store it safely when out and about.

Final thoughts

Recall is not about shouting louder. It is about making coming back easy to understand, worth choosing and safe to practise. Choose rewards thoughtfully, keep sessions short and build success gradually.

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Useful rewards for better recall practice

Training Treats - Charlie & Cookie Co. Training Treats View all Fish Treats - Charlie & Cookie Co. Fish Treats View all Veggie Treats - Charlie & Cookie Co. Veggie Treats View all