Module 5: Temperament and Trainabiltiy

A Breeder’s Perspective Rooted in History, Purpose, and Preservation

As preservation breeders of the Bedlington Terrier, we must never forget that temperament is as essential to breed type as outline, coat texture, or movement. The Bedlington’s hallmark silhouette may draw the eye—but it is the character behind the outline that sustains the breed.

The Bedlington is not merely a “lamb-like” dog in appearance. He is a true terrier in heart, a sporting companion in instinct, and a devoted household member in practice. Understanding this balance is critical for anyone breeding, evaluating, or training the breed.

 

The Historical Foundation of Temperament

To understand the modern Bedlington’s temperament, we must begin in Northumberland, England, where miners and hunters relied on these dogs for vermin control, coursing rabbits, and even competition in the rough sporting matches of the 18th and 19th centuries.

This background explains three core temperament pillars:

  1. Courage without recklessness
  2. Independence balanced by loyalty
  3. High intelligence with strong problem-solving ability

Unlike some terriers developed solely for earth work, the Bedlington combined speed, endurance, and agility with terrier grit. The result is a dog that is mentally quick and physically versatile.

 

The Hallmarks of Bedlington Temperament

  1. Keen Intelligence

Bedlingtons are highly perceptive dogs. They read their environment—and their people—quickly. This intelligence is both a gift and a responsibility for breeders.

A well-bred Bedlington:

  • Learns commands rapidly
  • Anticipates patterns
  • Develops habits quickly (both good and bad)
  • Exhibits strong environmental awareness

Because of this intelligence, early structured exposure is essential. Puppies lacking thoughtful socialization may become overly cautious or selective in unfamiliar situations.

  1. Sensitivity and Emotional Depth

One of the most misunderstood aspects of the breed is their emotional sensitivity. Beneath the terrier confidence lies a dog deeply bonded to its family.

Bedlingtons:

  • Form strong attachments to their primary people
  • Respond poorly to harsh corrections
  • Thrive with positive reinforcement
  • May shut down under heavy-handed training

This sensitivity is not weakness—it is refinement. Properly nurtured, it produces a companion that is intuitive and responsive.

  1. Terrier Fire

Let us be clear: the Bedlington Terrier is still a terrier.

The American Kennel Club describes the breed as “a lithe, energetic dog with the endurance of a hound.” That energy has purpose.

A well-bred Bedlington will:

  • Retain prey drive
  • Show alertness and confidence
  • Display appropriate assertiveness without instability
  • Stand its ground when challenged

Good breeders work diligently to preserve correct terrier temperament—spirited but stable. Excessive shyness or uncontrolled aggression are both deviations from breed character. 

  1. Versatility and Adaptability

Bedlingtons excel in a variety of activities:

  • Conformation
  • Lure coursing
  • Agility
  • Obedience
  • Therapy work
  • Companion roles

Their moderate size and adaptable energy make them equally suited for country or suburban life—provided they receive mental engagement.

They are not hyperactive. They are purpose-driven.

 

Trainability: Strengths and Considerations

The Bedlington Mind

Bedlingtons are thinkers. They are not robotic obedience dogs. They will often ask, “Why?” before complying.

Training principles that succeed with this breed:

  • Short, varied sessions
  • Positive reinforcement
  • Clear structure and consistency
  • Mental stimulation
  • Early boundary setting

They respond exceptionally well to:

  • Clicker training
  • Shaping exercises
  • Problem-solving games
  • Reward-based systems

Harsh corrections can produce avoidance behaviors or stubborn resistance. Respect earns respect with this breed.

 

Early Development and Breeder Responsibility

Temperament does not begin at eight weeks—it begins in the whelping box.

Responsible breeders:

  • Expose puppies to varied surfaces and sounds
  • Encourage early neurological stimulation
  • Introduce controlled novel experiences
  • Assess confidence and recovery response
  • Place puppies appropriately based on temperament

Some Bedlington puppies are naturally bold; others are thoughtful and observant. Matching temperament to home is a breeder’s ethical obligation.

 

Social Temperament

With People

Well-bred Bedlingtons are:

  • Affectionate but not clingy
  • Alert but not suspicious
  • Friendly but discerning

They are often described as having a “sense of humor.” They delight in interaction and are known for expressive body language.

With Children

When properly socialized, they do well with respectful children. However:

  • Rough handling may provoke defensive reactions.
  • Early exposure is important.
  • Supervision is always recommended.
  • Puppy teeth are like needles.

With Other Dogs

This area requires honest assessment.

As terriers, some Bedlingtons may:

  • Exhibit same-sex assertiveness
  • Respond quickly to provocation
  • Show competitive behavior

Responsible breeding has greatly improved stability, but breeders must remain vigilant. Stable temperament should always be prioritized over flash.

With Small Animals

Prey drive remains intact in many lines. Bedlingtons may:

  • Chase small pets
  • Pursue wildlife
  • React to quick movement

Early training and management are key, but instinct cannot be bred out without compromising breed essence.

 

The Mature Bedlington

As they age, many Bedlingtons develop a calm, almost aristocratic demeanor in the home. They are content to rest quietly—until activity calls.

They do not require constant stimulation, but they do require:

  • Purpose
  • Interaction
  • Consistent leadership

Without structure, intelligence becomes mischief.

 

Faults of Temperament (A Breeding Perspective)

The Bedlington Terrier standard calls for a dog that is:

“…the dog is particularly alert and full of immense energy and courage.”

Serious concerns include:

  • Persistent shyness
  • Instability under pressure
  • Unprovoked aggression
  • Excessive sharpness

No degree of beauty or show worthiness compensates for faulty temperament.

As breeders, we are guardians not only of physical type but of character.

 

The Ethical Breeder’s Commitment

To preserve correct temperament in the Bedlington Terrier, breeders must:

  • Select for stability as rigorously as structure
  • Evaluate stud dogs not only for pedigree but for disposition
  • Avoid doubling up on questionable temperaments
  • Prioritize long-term temperament trends within lines
  • Maintain honest communication with puppy buyers

Temperament is heritable. So is instability.

Our responsibility extends beyond ribbons and rankings—it extends to the families who live with these dogs for a lifetime.

 

Final Reflection

The Bedlington Terrier is a study in contrast:

  • Lamb in outline
  • Lion in heart
  • Scholar in mind
  • Devoted companion in spirit

When thoughtfully bred and respectfully trained, the Bedlington reveals extraordinary depth—intelligent, spirited, affectionate, and dignified.

Temperament and trainability are not secondary traits. They are the living soul of the breed.

And as stewards of this remarkable terrier, we must protect them with as much care as we protect their outline.

Temperament Testing
In Bedlington Terrier Puppies

A Preservation Breeder’s Framework for Evaluation, Placement, and Long-Term Success

In a preservation breeding program, temperament testing is not a novelty—it is a responsibility.

For the Bedlington Terrier, whose character blends terrier fire, emotional sensitivity, and keen intelligence, thoughtful temperament evaluation is essential. Structure can be seen in weeks. Coat develops over time. But temperament, once poorly placed or misunderstood, shapes the lifetime outcome of the dog.

Temperament testing is not about labeling puppies. It is about understanding tendencies, resilience, and developmental trajectory so that each puppy is placed in an environment where it will thrive.

Why Temperament Testing Matters in Bedlingtons

The Bedlington is not a generic companion breed. Proper temperament reflects:

  • Confidence without hardness
  • Sensitivity without fragility
  • Alertness without instability
  • Terrier instinct without uncontrolled sharpness

A preservation breeder must evaluate:

  • Recovery from stress
  • Human orientation
  • Problem-solving persistence
  • Sound sensitivity
  • Social confidence
  • Prey drive indicators
  • Startle response
  • Frustration tolerance

These traits influence suitability for:

  • Conformation
  • Performance sports
  • Active companion homes
  • Therapy prospects
  • Experienced terrier households

Testing protects the puppy and the family.

 

When to Test

The most accepted window for formal temperament testing is 49–56 days (7–8 weeks).

At this age:

  • Neurological systems are functional
  • Fear periods are not yet dominant
  • Responses are more predictive than at 5 weeks
  • Puppies are mobile and environmentally aware

However, great breeders evaluate temperament continuously from birth.

 

The Foundation: Early Neurological and Environmental Influence

Temperament testing is only meaningful when paired with structured early development.

Many preservation breeders incorporate:

Early Neurological Stimulation (ENS)

Often associated with the “Bio Sensor” program developed for military working dogs, ENS includes mild stress exposures during days 3–16 to enhance resilience.

Research suggests potential improvements in:

  • Cardiovascular performance
  • Stress tolerance
  • Recovery rate

While not magic, structured early handling builds coping capacity.

 

Established Temperament Testing Programs

Several formal testing models are widely used in breeding programs. No single test is infallible, but each provides insight. There are many YouTube videos on each system.

The Volhard Puppy Aptitude Test (PAT)

Developed by Joachim and Wendy Volhard, this remains one of the most recognized evaluation systems.

Assessment Areas Include:

  • Social attraction
  • Following response
  • Restraint tolerance
  • Social dominance
  • Elevation dominance
  • Retrieving instinct
  • Touch sensitivity
  • Sound sensitivity
  • Sight sensitivity
  • Stability

For Bedlington Terriers, the Volhard test is particularly useful in evaluating:

  • Human engagement
  • Recovery after restraint
  • Reaction to sudden stimuli
  • Problem-solving persistence

Important: Volhard scoring must be interpreted in breed context. A terrier should not score like a Golden Retriever. Mild independence is not a fault—it is breed character.

 

Avidog Transformational Puppy Program

Avidog builds upon ENS and adds:

  • Structured problem-solving exposure
  • Emotional resilience tracking
  • Structured enrichment protocols
  • Developmental milestone recording

This program is valuable for breeders who want data-driven, longitudinal tracking from birth through placement.

It encourages:

  • Tracking recovery time
  • Observing initiative
  • Recording novel object curiosity
  • Assessing frustration tolerance

For Bedlingtons—whose intelligence and sensitivity require balance—this approach provides nuanced insight.

 

Puppy Culture Program

Puppy Culture is a breeder-focused developmental curriculum emphasizing:

  • Early socialization
  • Emotional regulation
  • Barrier frustration training
  • Startle recovery exercises
  • Structured exposure hierarchies

It integrates temperament awareness with practical rearing strategies.

For Bedlingtons, Puppy Culture helps prevent:

  • Excessive sensitivity
  • Overreaction to sound
  • Poor frustration tolerance
  • Hyper-attachment behaviors

 

Breed-Specific Considerations in Testing

A generic temperament test must be interpreted through the lens of breed history.

Bedlington-Specific Traits to Watch:

  1. Recovery Time
    • How quickly does the puppy re-engage after a startle?
    • Prolonged avoidance suggests softness beyond breed norm.
  2. Terrier Persistence
    • Does the puppy problem-solve or give up?
    • Balanced persistence is ideal.
  3. Human Focus
    • Does the puppy seek engagement voluntarily?
    • Excessive independence may require experienced placement.
  4. Sound Response
    • Bedlingtons should notice, not collapse.
    • Startle → orient → investigate is ideal.
  5. Body Sensitivity
    • Grooming tolerance matters in this breed.
    • Evaluate reaction to foot handling and restraint.

 

Interpreting Results: Patterns Over Scores

Breeders avoid rigid labeling such as:

  • “Alpha”
  • “Submissive”
  • “Dominant”

Instead, we look for patterns:

  • Confidence + quick recovery → Performance prospect
  • Social + stable + moderate drive → Companion placement
  • High drive + assertiveness → Experienced terrier home
  • Thoughtful + sensitive → Calm, structured environment

No single response defines a puppy. Consistency across observations matters.

 

Limitations of Temperament Testing

Temperament testing is predictive—not prophetic.

Variables influencing outcomes include:

  • Placement environment
  • Ongoing training
  • Owner consistency
  • Social exposure post-placement
  • Genetic layering beyond observable behavior

Temperament is heritable—but expression is shaped by environment.

A confident puppy poorly socialized may develop reactivity.
A thoughtful puppy in the right home may blossom into brilliance.

Testing informs placement. It does not replace responsible ownership.

 

Ethical Placement and Transparency

A preservation breeder’s responsibility includes:

  • Sharing honest temperament insights with buyers
  • Refusing mismatches
  • Educating families about breed tendencies
  • Providing structured transition guidance
  • Remaining available for mentorship

Placing a high-drive puppy in a sedentary household invites failure.
Placing a sensitive puppy in a chaotic home creates stress.

Temperament testing protects the breed’s reputation.

 

Integrating Testing Into a Breeding Program

A thoughtful temperament evaluation protocol includes:

  1. Daily structured observation logs
  2. ENS or early developmental protocol
  3. Formal testing at 7–8 weeks
  4. Video documentation for review
  5. Multi-person evaluator input (to reduce bias)
  6. Post-placement follow-up tracking

Over time, breeders begin to see correlations between:

  • Certain pedigree combinations
  • Specific temperament strengths
  • Recovery patterns
  • Drive levels

This data strengthens future breeding decisions.

 

Preservation Breeder’s Perspective

The Bedlington Terrier should be:

Alert. Confident. Intelligent. Affectionate. Dignified. Not shy or nervous.

Temperament testing is not about producing “easy” dogs.
It is about producing correct dogs.

Correct temperament preserves:

  • Working heritage
  • Stability in modern homes
  • Breed integrity
  • Public trust

When conducted thoughtfully and interpreted wisely, temperament evaluation becomes one of the most powerful tools in a serious Bedlington breeding program.

Temperament Testing allows us to protect not only the breed—

—but its soul.