Puppy Raiser

Puppy Raiser

Organisation role · Flexible hours
Coventry, West Midlands, England, United Kingdom
Animal care
People with disabilities
3 Good health and well-being10 Reduced inequalities

Contact person

Verity O'DonnellAsk Verity a question
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Guide Dogs
#94920
Scan me or visit www.getinvolvedcoventry.org.uk/o/Guide-Dogs3/activities/Puppy-Raiser/94920 to join

Summary

We’re looking for people who want to make a difference, who have enough space to raise a puppy as well as the time to care for them.

Detailed description

Our puppy raisers play a vital role in the early development and education of our dogs, providing a loving home as they grow towards the next stage of their training.


Puppy raisers are responsible for looking after a puppy in their own home for 12-16 months. This involves teaching them basic commands, familiarising them with different environments and attending monthly puppy classes. They then head off to a training centre to begin their specialised training.


Puppy raising can be challenging at times, you’re responsible for a young pup in your own home – there might be some chewed slippers and long nights along the way, and you may need to adapt your routine. But knowing that you’ve played a key role in creating a life changing guide dog partnership is hugely rewarding and many of our volunteers go on to look after several puppies as they love it so much.


You’ll also receive support every step of the way from a dedicated Puppy Development Advisor, online learning tools, and regular puppy classes with other volunteer puppy raisers in your local area. There is a big community of volunteer puppy raisers who are happy to share advice and top tips with you on your journey.


Becoming a puppy raiser will require you to adapt your routine and home life. Here are some key considerations:

Home alone - in the early days, you won’t be able to leave your puppy for more than 30 minutes. This will slowly build up to 4 hours over time.

Toilet training - in the beginning, you’ll need to take your puppy outside every 15-20 minutes to encourage them to go to the toilet outside.

Feeding - your puppy will be on 4 meals a day (fed every 4 hours) and will be on this amount of food until they are 14 weeks old. From 6 months old, this will drop to two meals a day.


It’s a hugely important role – a vital link in the chain of dog socialisation and training, providing the puppy with the essential foundation for its future as a life-changing guide dog. The first year of any puppy’s life is critical for its physical, behavioural and emotional development.


For more information, please don't hesitate to get in touch, we'd be delighted to hear from you and hope to welcome you as a volunteer with Guide Dogs soon.

What we will provide to volunteers

💸 Reimbursement of costs🤝 Extra support

Getting there

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About Guide Dogs

Guide Dogs is one of the UK’s leading sight loss charities. Our expert staff, volunteers and life-changing guide dogs help people with sight loss live the life they choose.