In this episode, the team explores why dogs bark and why understanding the reason behind it is essential for behaviour change. They discuss how barking is a normal form of canine communication but can also signal stress, boredom, or medical issues. The conversation looks at the many types of barking — from territorial and fear-based to social, anxiety, and breed-specific — and offers insights on how to identify what your dog’s barking really means before taking steps to address it.
Listener Highlights
- Barking is a normal communication behaviour for dogs, but excessive or persistent barking can indicate stress, boredom, or anxiety.
- Identifying the cause of barking is the first step — different causes need different solutions, from environmental changes to veterinary checks.
- Common causes include boredom, fear, separation distress, pain, age-related issues, territorial protection, and breed-specific traits.
- Older dogs may bark more due to hearing loss, pain, or cognitive decline, while anxious dogs may bark from confusion or fear.
- Monitoring cameras help owners understand when and why barking happens, especially when dogs are left alone.
- Some barking is entirely normal and healthy — the goal is to reduce problem barking, not eliminate all vocalisation.
- Territorial and fear barking often sound sharper or more urgent, while anxiety barking has a “woeful” or howling tone.
- Breed predispositions matter — herding and guarding dogs are naturally more vocal and may bark as part of their instinctive behaviour.
- Excessive barking can cause stress for both owners and dogs, so understanding motivation helps create effective and compassionate solutions.
Jump to a Section
| Time | Topic |
|---|---|
| 00:00 – 02:05 | Introduction and why it’s important to understand why dogs bark. |
| 02:05 – 05:14 | Normal vs problem barking — communication, stress, and sensitivity to noise. |
| 05:15 – 06:42 | Physical and medical causes: pain, ageing, cognitive decline, and hearing loss. |
| 06:43 – 10:23 | Monitoring barking with cameras and recognising emotional versus environmental triggers. |
| 10:24 – 12:16 | Understanding different bark types — anxiety, alert, or play-related vocalisation. |
| 12:17 – 14:52 | How to tell if barking is excessive and using monitoring tools to gather objective data. |
| 14:53 – 17:24 | Separation anxiety, boredom, and destructive behaviours — spotting the difference. |
| 17:25 – 19:02 | Territorial and social facilitation barking — when dogs bark because others do. |
| 19:03 – 22:42 | Fear-based barking and environmental triggers like neighbours, noise, or objects. |
| 22:43 – 25:44 | Links between pain, noise sensitivity, and anxiety in older dogs. |
| 25:45 – 27:42 | Breed-specific barking — how herding, guarding, and hunting instincts influence vocal behaviour. |
| 27:43 – 28:40 | Summary: barking as a normal communication and why understanding motivation matters. |
General advice only. Always consult your veterinarian or a qualified trainer for guidance specific to your pet.
