Watch this Labrador retrieve a duck across a pond. Now let's talk about why yours might be eating your couch.
Look at her go.
This is what centuries of selective breeding looks like in action. This Labrador isn't being "good" or "obedient"—she's living her best life. Tracking, swimming, retrieving, using her soft mouth, working alongside her human. Every cell in her body was designed for this moment.
This is what Total Welfare looks like for a Gun/Hunting dog.
Your gun/hunting dog has these exact same drives. The same need to retrieve. The same obsession with water. The same desire to use their mouth for something. The same stamina bred into them for full days in the field.
Except your dog lives in a city. Or suburbs. Maybe a backyard if you're lucky, leash walks, some fetch at the dog park on weekends.
Their physical needs might be met. But what about their mental state? Their need for meaningful work? Their environment's ability to support who they actually are? That's where things fall apart.
And we wonder why they're "misbehaving."
There Are No Problem Behaviors, Only Unmet Needs
Let's reframe what you're seeing at home:
Destructive chewing? A mouth bred to carry things gently, desperate for a job.
Leash pulling? A dog bred to track scents and move forward with purpose, totally frustrated by stop-and-go city walking.
Jumping on everyone? Frustrated greeting behavior and retrieval instincts looking for any chance to express themselves.
Counter surfing? Normal foraging drives with nowhere to go.
Obsessive ball fixation? A retrieval drive that's been given one tiny outlet and is holding on for dear life.
Hyperactivity that no amount of exercise touches? Their brain is starving. These dogs were bred to problem-solve in the field all day, not just run in circles.
Separation anxiety? Gun/hunting dogs were literally bred to work alongside humans from dawn to dusk. Being alone for 8+ hours isn't "disobedience"—their welfare is genuinely compromised.
Here's what we all need to understand: This isn't your fault.
You didn't create your dog's genetics. You're doing your best in an environment that wasn't designed for either of you. Cities weren't built thinking about what dogs actually need. And the pet industry has been selling us the wrong solution forever—more obedience training, when what's actually compromising our dogs' welfare is lack of enrichment that honors who they are.
Your dog doesn't need to learn "sit" better. They need their life to match their genetics so they can stop being so frustrated.
So What Do We Do?
Most of us can't take our labs duck hunting three times a week. But we can get creative about supporting their welfare in realistic ways.
Here's what we can do as dog guardians:
Scent work and nose games. Hide treats or toys around the house. Let them track and search. This taps into the same scenting and tracking instincts you see in that video, and it changes their mental state completely.
Purposeful retrieve games. Not just throwing a ball until they're exhausted. Teach them to find specific items, retrieve things you "need," carry groceries from the car. Give their retrieval drive actual meaning.
Water play whenever possible. Kiddie pools, sprinklers, trips to dog-friendly lakes or beaches. Labs are water dogs genetically. Denying this is like asking a fish not to swim.
Food puzzles and foraging activities. Scatter feeding, snuffle mats, puzzle toys. Let them "hunt" for their meals. This addresses nutrition AND their need for meaningful work at the same time.
Decompression walks. Not training walks. Walks where pulling and sniffing are allowed. Long-line leashes in safe spaces where they can follow scent trails and make choices.
Teach them "jobs" around the house. Carrying the newspaper, finding your keys, putting toys away. These dogs were bred to work with humans. Partnership tasks create positive mental states and give them purpose.
The L.E.G.S.® Framework Meets Total Welfare
We have to look at the whole picture through both L.E.G.S.® and the Five Domains:
Learning - What has this dog learned works to get their needs met (even if we call it "destructive")?
Environment - How is their actual living situation either supporting or undermining their welfare?
Genetics - What was this breed group created to do, and how can we provide opportunities that honor that?
Self - What's this individual dog's mental state right now, and what do they need today?
The answer is never just "more training." It's understanding how the gap between genetics and environment is compromising your dog's welfare—and then actually addressing those gaps.
Small Changes, Big Impact
You don't need acres of land or hunting permits to support your Gun/Hunting dog's welfare. You need to understand what's affecting their mental state and get strategic about enrichment.
When we stop trying to train away genetics and start working with them, everything shifts. The "problem behaviors" often decrease naturally because the underlying needs are finally being met.
Your Lab isn't broken. They're not stubborn or difficult or "bad."
They're just a working dog with nowhere to work.
Ready to figure out your dog's individual welfare needs and create an enrichment plan that actually fits your life? That's what I help families do. Using the L.E.G.S.® framework alongside the Five Domains model, we identify where welfare is compromised and build realistic solutions.
Because every dog deserves to feel what that Labrador in the video is feeling—fully alive, fully engaged, fully themselves.
Learn more about my L.E.G.S.®-based behavioral and welfare assessment services and how we can support your dog's complete wellbeing here.



