Ethical and force-free • Science-based expertise • Fully accredited behaviourist

I have dedicated my life to being able to help owners with dogs that are otherwise considered write offs using only force free training. At College4Canines, we wholeheartedly believe that every dog is an individual, deserving of a training experience that caters to their specific needs.
Specialised behavioural training for reactive dogs designed to make a real difference by dealing with the root cause, emotion, or motivation. We also provide assistance dog training for owner-trained teams.
From Bronze foundations to advanced Silver and Gold Lifeskills classes in Acklington Village Hall provide professional training for all ages.
Giving your new addition the best start with force-free methods in our Perfect Puppy training classes in Acklington Village Hall, providing professional training to pups under 6 months
Thrilling Scentwork classes and workshops in Acklington Village Hall through the UK College of Scent Dogs to enrich your dog's life for fun.
And be the first to know when new class dates are available for our Puppy, Lifeskills, or Scentwork sessions. I also use this list to share updates on new services and force-free training opportunities across Northumberland.

College 4 Canines is led by Denise Devereux, a fully qualified dog behaviourist supporting dogs across Blyth and Northumberland.
I got into dog behaviour when I rescued my first dog, Bear. We were turned down for classes because of his behaviour, which made me determined to prove them wrong.
College 4 Canines was set up to allow people who cannot attend classes because their dog isn't "suitable" for a class environment to still have access to professional force free training.
If I could change the world, I want to be the one that shows owners and other trainers that force free training works.
Member of Pet Professional Guild
Member of The Pet Professional Network
Student member of APBC working towards Clinical Animal Behaviourist
Accredited Detection Dog Handler and Scentwork Instructor through
the UK College of Scent Dogs
Assessor for PAWS Therapy Dog Training
Assistance Dog Trainer for Pawsability (Owner Trained Assistance Dogs)
We’re proud to be recommended by families across Acklington.
Our reviews reflect our calm approach, clear support, and commitment to dog welfare.

Who it’s for
Owners of reactive dogs wanting to use force free training or those with dogs considered "write offs" by others.
What we help with
Reactivity, emotion-led behaviours, assistance dog tasks, and unique behavioural challenges.
Every plan is tailored to the individual, using effective, force-free methods that prioritise ethical treatment regardless of the intensity of the behaviour.

Perfect Puppy: Giving your new addition the best start with force-free methods.
Lifeskills (Bronze, Silver & Gold): For owners wanting to work on obedience up to advanced levels, or rescue dogs with little training history.
Scentwork: Thrilling classes through the UK College of Scent Dogs to enrich your dog's life for fun.
Reactive Dog Classes: The only place in Northumberland offering specific group classes for reactive dogs.

Helpful articles covering puppy training, behaviour insights, and practical tips to support life with your dog.

Puppy biting is one of the most common struggles new dog owners face. If you have a young puppy constantly grabbing hands, clothing, feet, or furniture with sharp little teeth, you are not alone. The good news is that puppy biting is completely normal developmental behaviour.
Puppies explore the world with their mouths in the same way babies use their hands. Biting and mouthing help puppies:
Explore their environment
Relieve teething discomfort
Learn bite inhibition
Initiate play
Burn excess energy
Communicate excitement or frustration
The important thing to remember is that puppies are not being “naughty” or “dominant.” They are simply behaving like puppies.
At College 4 Canines, we use force-free puppy training methods that focus on teaching puppies what to do instead of punishing natural behaviours.
Many outdated training methods recommend:
Holding a puppy’s mouth shut
Tapping the nose
Yelling “NO”
Alpha rolling
Scruffing
Using aversive sprays
These methods can increase fear, frustration, and over-arousal, often making biting worse over time.
Force-free puppy training focuses on:
Preventing rehearsal of biting
Teaching appropriate alternatives
Reinforcing calm behaviour
Managing the environment
Supporting emotional regulation
Positive reinforcement builds trust and confidence while helping puppies learn safely.
Most puppies begin teething around 12 weeks and continue until approximately 6 months of age.
During this period, puppies may:
Bite more intensely
Seek out chewing opportunities
Become more frustrated
Struggle to settle
Need additional sleep
Providing appropriate chewing outlets is essential.
Good puppy-safe chew options include:
Rubber enrichment toys
Puppy-safe chews
Frozen carrots
Lick mats
Stuffed Kongs
Soft puppy toys
Rotating enrichment regularly helps prevent boredom and reduces unwanted biting behaviour.
If your puppy begins biting hands or clothing, calmly redirect them onto an appropriate toy.
Keep toys easily accessible around the house so you can quickly swap inappropriate biting for acceptable chewing.
Reward your puppy when they engage with the toy.
Many puppies bite when they become over-tired or over-stimulated.
Reward calm behaviours such as:
Settling on a mat
Lying quietly
Chewing calmly
Relaxing beside you
Puppies need significant sleep each day — often 18–20 hours.
Overtired puppies frequently become bitey puppies.
Preventing repeated rehearsal is important.
Helpful management strategies include:
Using baby gates
Using pens
Supervising interactions
Providing regular naps
Reducing over-arousal
Limiting chaotic play
Management is not avoidance — it is helping your puppy succeed.
Physical corrections may suppress behaviour temporarily but often increase anxiety and damage trust.
Force-free dog training focuses on long-term emotional wellbeing and reliable learning.
Structured play helps puppies learn impulse control and appropriate interaction.
Games such as:
Tug with rules
Find it games
Food enrichment
Scentwork games
Recall games
can help channel natural puppy behaviours positively.
Young puppies have very limited impulse control.
Training should focus on gradual learning rather than perfection.
Too much physical exercise can actually increase over-arousal and biting.
Mental enrichment and appropriate rest are equally important.
Everyone in the household should respond consistently to puppy biting.
Mixed responses can confuse puppies and slow progress.
Most puppies show significant improvement between 5–7 months as:
Teething ends
Impulse control develops
Training progresses
Emotional regulation improves
Consistency and patience are essential.
Professional force-free puppy classes can help owners:
Understand puppy behaviour
Prevent unwanted habits
Improve focus and calmness
Build engagement
Teach life skills safely
At College 4 Canines, our puppy classes in Northumberland focus on creating confident, well-adjusted puppies using ethical, science-based training methods. Whether you need help with puppy biting, socialisation, recall, or loose lead walking, positive reinforcement training helps build lifelong skills while protecting your relationship with your dog.
View more about our Perfect Puppy Classes in Morpeth, Northumberland at;
https://college4canines.co.uk/perfect-puppy-classes
Puppy biting is a normal developmental stage — not bad behaviour.
Using force-free puppy training methods allows puppies to learn safely and confidently while building trust and emotional resilience.
With patience, management, enrichment, and positive reinforcement, most puppies develop excellent bite inhibition and calmer behaviour as they mature.
If you are struggling with puppy biting, professional puppy classes can provide guidance, structure, and support during this important developmental stage.
View more about our Perfect Puppy Classes in Morpeth, Northumberland at;

Puppy biting is one of the most common struggles new dog owners face. If you have a young puppy constantly grabbing hands, clothing, feet, or furniture with sharp little teeth, you are not alone. The good news is that puppy biting is completely normal developmental behaviour.
Puppies explore the world with their mouths in the same way babies use their hands. Biting and mouthing help puppies:
Explore their environment
Relieve teething discomfort
Learn bite inhibition
Initiate play
Burn excess energy
Communicate excitement or frustration
The important thing to remember is that puppies are not being “naughty” or “dominant.” They are simply behaving like puppies.
At College 4 Canines, we use force-free puppy training methods that focus on teaching puppies what to do instead of punishing natural behaviours.
Many outdated training methods recommend:
Holding a puppy’s mouth shut
Tapping the nose
Yelling “NO”
Alpha rolling
Scruffing
Using aversive sprays
These methods can increase fear, frustration, and over-arousal, often making biting worse over time.
Force-free puppy training focuses on:
Preventing rehearsal of biting
Teaching appropriate alternatives
Reinforcing calm behaviour
Managing the environment
Supporting emotional regulation
Positive reinforcement builds trust and confidence while helping puppies learn safely.
Most puppies begin teething around 12 weeks and continue until approximately 6 months of age.
During this period, puppies may:
Bite more intensely
Seek out chewing opportunities
Become more frustrated
Struggle to settle
Need additional sleep
Providing appropriate chewing outlets is essential.
Good puppy-safe chew options include:
Rubber enrichment toys
Puppy-safe chews
Frozen carrots
Lick mats
Stuffed Kongs
Soft puppy toys
Rotating enrichment regularly helps prevent boredom and reduces unwanted biting behaviour.
If your puppy begins biting hands or clothing, calmly redirect them onto an appropriate toy.
Keep toys easily accessible around the house so you can quickly swap inappropriate biting for acceptable chewing.
Reward your puppy when they engage with the toy.
Many puppies bite when they become over-tired or over-stimulated.
Reward calm behaviours such as:
Settling on a mat
Lying quietly
Chewing calmly
Relaxing beside you
Puppies need significant sleep each day — often 18–20 hours.
Overtired puppies frequently become bitey puppies.
Preventing repeated rehearsal is important.
Helpful management strategies include:
Using baby gates
Using pens
Supervising interactions
Providing regular naps
Reducing over-arousal
Limiting chaotic play
Management is not avoidance — it is helping your puppy succeed.
Physical corrections may suppress behaviour temporarily but often increase anxiety and damage trust.
Force-free dog training focuses on long-term emotional wellbeing and reliable learning.
Structured play helps puppies learn impulse control and appropriate interaction.
Games such as:
Tug with rules
Find it games
Food enrichment
Scentwork games
Recall games
can help channel natural puppy behaviours positively.
Young puppies have very limited impulse control.
Training should focus on gradual learning rather than perfection.
Too much physical exercise can actually increase over-arousal and biting.
Mental enrichment and appropriate rest are equally important.
Everyone in the household should respond consistently to puppy biting.
Mixed responses can confuse puppies and slow progress.
Most puppies show significant improvement between 5–7 months as:
Teething ends
Impulse control develops
Training progresses
Emotional regulation improves
Consistency and patience are essential.
Professional force-free puppy classes can help owners:
Understand puppy behaviour
Prevent unwanted habits
Improve focus and calmness
Build engagement
Teach life skills safely
At College 4 Canines, our puppy classes in Northumberland focus on creating confident, well-adjusted puppies using ethical, science-based training methods. Whether you need help with puppy biting, socialisation, recall, or loose lead walking, positive reinforcement training helps build lifelong skills while protecting your relationship with your dog.
View more about our Perfect Puppy Classes in Morpeth, Northumberland at;
https://college4canines.co.uk/perfect-puppy-classes
Puppy biting is a normal developmental stage — not bad behaviour.
Using force-free puppy training methods allows puppies to learn safely and confidently while building trust and emotional resilience.
With patience, management, enrichment, and positive reinforcement, most puppies develop excellent bite inhibition and calmer behaviour as they mature.
If you are struggling with puppy biting, professional puppy classes can provide guidance, structure, and support during this important developmental stage.
View more about our Perfect Puppy Classes in Morpeth, Northumberland at;

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Kind, professional support for dogs considered "unsuitable" elsewhere. Book your classes or an assessment call today.
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