![]() It was using these methods, together with the realisation that he’d given one of his first cockers, FTCh Cheweky Housten of Beggarbush, too much freedom - by encouraging, rather than harnessing, her natural drive and instincts, making her hard to handle - that led to Ben being so successful with her half-sister, Fatty. ![]() Photos by Sarah Farnsworth for Country Life. These days, he’s sharing the secret, and Paula Lester paid a visit with her labrador, Nimrod. We hope you enjoy looking back on this piece below, and Ben will be back next weekend with a new advice column using his Beggarbush methods and if you’ve got a question you’d like to ask, simply email us at and we’ll put it to him for consideration in a future article.įor years, Ben Randall felt that something was wrong with the way most dogs are trained - then he happened upon his own approach to training which made him hugely successful. As he says in his piece about how to stop a dog barking at the doorbell, having a dog who is relaxed, happy and has total faith in his or her owner is hugely important: ‘It trusts me and our partnership and knows that there’s no threat, as I am in control of the situation.’ Underpinning the advice he gives out on the Country Life website every Sunday - and now, in shortened form, in the pages of the magazine each Wednesday - is a belief in building a beautiful, trusting relationship between you and your dog.
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