05/18/2026
The Balance Behind a Good Working Terrier
I know this is a topic I keep coming back to, but it is just such an important part of successfully living with any working breed. One of the biggest misunderstandings about working-bred dogs is the idea that exercise alone creates fulfillment.
Physical exercise alone does not always create stability or fulfillment.
Many working and hunting breeds were developed to use both their bodies and their brains for hours at a time. Tracking. Hunting. Retrieving. Problem solving. Searching. Working independently while still handling pressure, structure, and direction from a handler.
That kind of instinct and drive does not disappear simply because the dog now lives in your home.
A walk around the neighborhood may provide physical movement, but for many working dogs, that alone does not meet the mental and instinctual needs they were bred for over generations.
This is why some dogs continue to struggle even after “lots of exercise.”
Not necessarily because they are “bad,” “crazy,” or poorly bred — but because many high-drive dogs also need:
• Engagement
• Structure
• Training
• Problem solving
• Clear expectations
• Purpose
• Appropriate outlets for instinct
A dog bred to use its brain will often create its own job when no direction is provided.
Digging.
Chewing.
Pacing.
Demand barking.
Obsessive behaviors.
Constant motion.
Dogs will naturally look for an outlet when those needs are unmet.
At the same time, good working dogs should also be capable of learning an off-switch.
An off-switch is not simply genetic luck.
It is developed through fulfillment, consistency, structure, and learning how to settle.
A well-bred working dog should be capable of both:
working hard when asked
and relaxing inside your home when its needs are appropriately met.
That balance matters.
Working-bred dogs can absolutely make wonderful companions and family dogs in the right homes. But instinct, drive, intensity, and purpose do not disappear simply because a breed is marketed as “just a pet.”
Generations of genetics still matter.
This is why responsible placement matters so much.
Before choosing a working or hunting breed, it is important to honestly ask:
Can I provide more than basic exercise?
Can I provide engagement, structure, training, and appropriate outlets?
Can I live with the traits this breed was intentionally developed for?
Because instinct and drive are not things that simply disappear with environment alone.
And in the right environment, those same traits people struggle with are often the exact traits that make these dogs exceptional.
This post may be shared with credit to the original writer.
©️Thistle Ridge 2026
The dog pictured is Thistle Ridge Chigger, one of the best examples of balance, instinct, intelligence, and stability I’ve ever owned. She worked in the field, tracked wounded game, raised not only her puppies, but a litter of orphan puppies, traveled everywhere with me, and still had the ability to quietly settle inside the house. She also remains an important part of the maternal foundation behind my program, with many of the traits discussed here still strongly represented through the dam line she helped shape.