Helping you build positive relationships from the Very beginning!





Whether you're already enrolled in one of our classes or would like to see when are where we hold our classes, this page has the times and dates of all upcoming classes.

Help your puppy develop essential life skills and good behaviour from an early age up to 20 weeks on the first day of the class. Small class sizes, individual coaching and reward-based, ethical methods to ensure a positive learning experience for both you and your puppy.
Upcoming Starting Dates:
Hadlow Down (TN22) 26 Feb 10:00
Hartfield (TN7) 23 Mar 16:30 (Break wks 6 Apr & 4 May)
Lingfield (RH7) 26 Ma 17:00
Hadlow Down (TN22) 9 April 10:00 (Break wks 30 Apr &7 May)
Lingfield (RH7) 14 May 17:00

Upcoming Starting Dates:
Lingfield 26 Mar 26 18:15

Upcoming Starting Dates:
Lingfield Thurs 28 May 26 18:15

Help your puppy develop essential life skills and good behaviour from an early age up to 20 weeks on the first day of class. Small class sizes, individual coaching and reward based, ethical methods to ensure a positive learning experience for you and your puppy.
Dates:
Hadlow Down (TN22) 26 Feb 10:00
Hartfield (TN7) 23 Mar 16:30 (Break wks 6 Apr & 4 May)
Lingfield (RH7) 26 Ma 17:00
Hadlow Down (TN22) 9 April 10:00 (Break wks 30 Apr &7 May)
Lingfield (RH7) 14 May 17:00

This course is designed for young dogs that have had some foundation (puppy) training. The 4 week course will help you to build your dog's ability to focus on you when out and about and be calmer around distractions. Dogs from 6 months+
Dates:
Lingfield Thurs 28 May 26 18:15

Helping you to grow your puppies confidence with husbandary procedures such as grooming, wearing equipment, veterinary produces and more. Dogs from 6 months+
Dates:
Lingfield 26 Mar 26 18:15



When you get a puppy you are likely to get lots of people telling you to make sure you socialise them as soon as possible and expose them to as much as possible.
However, it is so important to ensure that what they are experiencing is positive, we can do this well by watching our puppy's body language, so we can detect early signs that our puppies are uncomfortable and respond in a way to help them and avoid a situation from escalating, or becoming a negative experience.
It is a great idea to get them exposed to life even before they are able to walk outside, by carrying them (you can even get carriers to put your puppy in). However, take time to consider that if your puppy is held in place by you, or in the carrier, they have very little options to move away from something. By holding them, we are removing the choice of moving away from something worrying. So, for example, if your puppy is in your arms and three people are saying hi all at once, your puppy is unable to move away if they are feeling worried by the experience. If this is practiced often may result in a puppy that is not comfortable with strangers, as rather than serve to get them used to human affection, it has had a negative impact.

In order to help your puppy out in this situation and other new socialisation experiences you can spend time learning about dog body language. Doggie Language by Lili Chin has great examples both written and visual and is great to share with younger members of the family too! This allows you to improve your skills of understanding your puppy. Like with humans every puppy is different, so you have the chance to become your own puppy's expert!!!
Most puppies that are worried will show some/many of the following; body lower to the ground, backend lowered, ears back, tail tucked, moving away or towards, hiding, lip licking, whites of eyes, vocalisation, shaking, freezing, tension in their face and body. If you observe any of these behaviours it is important to respond in a way to help your puppy recover, rather than overwhelm them. You need to consider the distance you are to the object that is worrying them. Move away and give your puppy time to recover and return to their normal relaxed behaviours. Once they are relaxed and at a safe distance give them a tasty treat whilst observing the thing they were worried about, this will help create a more positive feeling.
Also remember the option of choice! If you are able to give your puppy a choice of what they approach, how they approach and if they approach at all, this gives them some control over their life. Which let's face it, we as puppy parents pretty much control most of their life; when they eat, what they eat, when they walk, when they go off-lead, etc...

“The degree of control that a organism has over a stressor potently modulates the impact”.- Maier et al 2006.
So what does this look like? When they experience something new, make sure you are standing behind them, let them lead the way. Praise them when they move forward or look at you and reward with a tasty treat. If puppies are reinforced for being brave and exploring something new, this will be a positive experience that they would want to repeat and therefore will increase their confidence for future experiences.
As well as body language of your own puppy, you need to help your puppy learn how to respond to other animals. If we set them up to practice calm greetings at a distance in safety for example another animal behind a fence, or your puppy securely on lead, and reward them with food and praise for this response then this will practiced and become their default response.
Take a look at some of out Puppy School graduates experiencing new situations in a way that builds confidence, optimism and preferred behaviours. Notice how they all have relaxed body language.

Give plenty of time to practice a few times throughout the week, but do not do too much all at once!
The importance of positive and pressure free experiences. Let your puppy progress at their own speed.
Good choices can be rewarded with food or toys, it will communicate that they are doing well, do not forget to do this!
Focus should be on finding out pups likes and dislikes, strengths and weaknesses.
Watch that body language! If your puppy shows signs they are worried (tucked tail, ears back, lowered body posture, trying to move away, hide, or barking, growling) do not push your puppy forward, create distance from the thing that is worrying them.
Keep encounters fun and positive and if not going well try doing it another day.
If you need some help training your puppy head over to my puppy training page to get you started on your tailored puppy pathway!
Puppies should be under 20 weeks old at the start of the class for Puppy School.
Youth Club is our follow-on course for graduates of Puppy School and pups would be
between 5 and 18 months.
Happy Handling is for puppies and dogs of any age that are relaxed and happy around dogs
and people.
Puppy School - covers settling calmly on a bed/puppy play biting and appropriate toy play/ handling
(grooming, husbandry procedures)/ loose lead walking/greetings without jumping up/sit, down,
stand and stay positions/recall/accepting people near to food bowls and chews/ socialisation with
other dogs and people and appropriate puppy greetings.
Youth Club - covers leave and drop cues/recall progression/ loose lead progression/distance control/emergency stop and distance positions/manners around doorways, gates and roadsides/ calmer
greetings/ boundary training.
Happy Handling - helps puppies and dogs cope better with various different handling situations.
Covers body language and consent-based husbandry techniques/cooperative grooming/nail
trims/vaccinations/medicating and how to transfer these skills to the vets.
Bring a mixture of tasty treats, a flat mat or towel, a stuffed Kong, a water bowl, long soft tugging
toys, poo bags, and a lead and collar or harness.
Puppy School, Happy Handling and Youth Club are all 6 week courses, that run weekly unless
specified.
Each class session lasts for 1 hour.
Yes, children can attend under the supervision of a responsible adult.
Small class sizes (5-6) allow for some individual coaching.
Please let your trainer know as soon as possible. There are no partial refunds for missed classes.
Click on the link to view class dates and times, and follow the instructions to sign up.
Lingfield (RH7), Hartfield (TN7), Forest Row (RH18), East Grinstead (RH19), Horley (RH6), Oxted
(RH8), Crowborough (TN6), some Uckfield (TN22) areas.
At your home address and in your local area.
Schedule a free discovery call by clicking the banner at the top of the page, selecting a date and time and completing the form.

Our Locations Include:
My Complex Canine offers professional puppy training classes (Puppy School Hartfield, Puppy School Uckfield and Puppy School Lingfield) and supportive private dog training programs. Owner Sarah Worth is a registered ABTC training instructor and practices science-led ethical training methods.
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