06/21/2026
🐾 Enrichment: One of the Most Important, Yet Most Overlooked Needs of Our Dogs 🐾
When people think about caring for their dog, they often focus on the basics:
✅ Food
✅ Water
✅ Exercise
✅ Veterinary care
All of these are important.
But there is another essential need that is often overlooked:
🧠 Enrichment
In fact, enrichment is one of the most powerful tools we have for improving welfare, preventing behaviour problems, building resilience, and helping our dogs live happier, more fulfilled lives.
So, what is enrichment?
Enrichment is anything that allows a dog to engage in natural, species-appropriate behaviours that satisfy their physical, emotional, and cognitive needs.
In simple terms, enrichment gives dogs opportunities to:
🐾 Sniff
🐾 Search
🐾 Explore
🐾 Forage
🐾 Chew
🐾 Lick
🐾 Shred
🐾 Dig
🐾 Problem solve
🐾 Learn
🐾 Investigate their environment
These are not “extras.”
These are behaviours dogs have evolved to perform.
When we provide opportunities for these behaviours, we improve welfare.
When we consistently prevent, restrict or avoid them, frustration often follows.
Why is enrichment so important?
Many behaviour problems are not caused by dogs being stubborn, dominant, naughty, or trying to make our lives difficult.
Often, they are simply dogs whose needs are not being fully met.
A bored brain will find something to do.
That may look like:
🐾 Excessive barking
🐾 Digging holes in the garden
🐾 Destroying furniture
🐾 Chewing household items
🐾 Hyperactivity
🐾 Restlessness
🐾 Difficulty settling
🐾 Attention seeking behaviours
🐾 Frustration related behaviours
The dog isn’t trying to be difficult.
They’re simply trying to meet their own behavioural needs.
🔺Enrichment is more than exercise
One of the biggest misconceptions in dog ownership is that physical exercise alone is enough.
Many people believe that if they walk their dog far enough, their needs have been met. Or that a dog just needs more physical exercise to be “worn out”. I have seen countless, high energy dogs, who spend hours each day exercising/ running, and yet at home - they never settle down ….
🤔But imagine if all you did every day was jog around your neighbourhood.
Your body might be tired, but your brain would still need stimulation.
Dogs are exactly the same.
A dog can walk for miles and still have significant unmet mental needs.
In fact, many dogs benefit more from a 20-minute sniffing session than they do from an additional mile of walking.
➖Mental effort is tiring.
➖Thinking is tiring.
➖Problem solving is tiring.
➖Using the nose is tiring.
And often these activities satisfy needs that physical exercise alone simply cannot.
🔆The magic of sniffing
If there is one enrichment activity that almost every dog should be allowed more of, it’s sniffing.
👃Dogs experience the world primarily through their nose.
While we gather most information through our eyes, dogs gather most information through scent.
Allowing your dog to stop and investigate scents isn’t wasting time.
It’s the canine equivalent of:
📰 Reading the news
📱 Checking social media
☕ Catching up on local gossip
🗺️ Finding out what’s happened in the neighbourhood
Every scent tells a story.
Who was here?
When were they here?
Were they stressed?
Healthy?
Male?
Female?
Friend?
Stranger?
Dogs can gather an extraordinary amount of information through scent alone.
Sniffing can also help lower arousal levels, increase confidence, encourage calm exploration, and provide enormous mental stimulation.
Different types of enrichment
👃 Scent Enrichment
Sniff walks
Scatter feeding
Find-it games
Scent work
🦴 Food Enrichment
Stuffed Kongs
Lick mats
Scatter feeding
Slow feeders
Food / treats hidden in cardboard boxes or rolled up towels
🧩 Cognitive Enrichment
Training sessions
Learning new skills
Interactive puzzles
Problem-solving activities
Games of “find it”
🌿 Environmental Enrichment
New walking routes
Different surfaces
Novel environments
Safe exploration opportunities
🐕 Social Enrichment
Positive interactions with suitable dogs
Positive interactions with people
Cooperative activities with family members
🦴 Species-Specific Enrichment
Chewing
Digging
Shredding
Foraging
Sniffing
Why enrichment should start early
One of the biggest mistakes I see is relying almost entirely on physical exercise to meet a dog’s needs.
Physical exercise is important.
But it should never be your dog’s only outlet for normal canine behaviour.
👀Why?
Because there will come a time in every dog’s life when physical activity is reduced or unavailable.
It isn’t a question of if.
It’s a question of when.
Your dog may:
🐾 Need surgery
🐾 Sustain an injury
🐾 Be recovering from illness
🐾 Develop arthritis or mobility issues
🐾 Be placed on crate rest by a veterinarian
🐾 Experience extreme weather conditions
🐾 Have an owner who is temporarily unable to walk them
Life happens.
And when it does, what happens if your dog’s entire lifestyle revolves around physical exercise?
Most dogs will struggle.
Not because they are difficult.
But because the only coping strategy they know has suddenly disappeared.
Building behavioural resilience
This is why introducing enrichment from puppyhood is so valuable.
A dog who has learned to enjoy sniffing, searching, licking, chewing, shredding, foraging, training games, and problem-solving has multiple ways to meet their needs.
They have options.
They have flexibility.
They have resilience.
Think of enrichment like building a diversified investment portfolio.
If one outlet becomes unavailable, there are many others to fall back on.
I’ve worked with many dogs recovering from surgery or veterinary restrictions where owners worried their dog would “go crazy” without walks.
Yet many of those dogs coped remarkably well.
Why?
Because enrichment was already part of their daily lives.
Their bodies needed rest.
But their brains could still work.
Their behavioural needs could still be met.
In some cases, a dog can comfortably go days, and sometimes even weeks, with significantly reduced physical exercise when medically necessary because they have a rich history of engaging with enrichment activities.
Not because they don’t need exercise.
But because exercise isn’t the only thing meeting their needs.
⚠️The goal isn’t to replace walks
Walks are wonderful.
Most dogs enjoy them.
Most dogs benefit from them.
But walks should be just one part of your dog’s enrichment portfolio, not the entire portfolio.
🟢The more ways your dog can engage with the world, the more adaptable they become.
✅The more adaptable they become, the better they cope when life inevitably throws challenges their way.
👉Enrichment isn’t a luxury.
It isn’t a trend.
It isn’t something to do only when you have spare time.
⚠️It is a fundamental welfare need.
Because a tired body is good.
But a fulfilled mind is even better. ❤️🐾