Are Barbets hyper?
Barbets are high-energy dogs — and yes, they can seem hyperactive, particularly as puppies and adolescents. But there's a difference between a breed with genuine exercise needs and a dog that's simply under-stimulated. Here's the honest picture.
France's ancient curly-coated water dog. The ancestor of the Poodle. Increasingly sought-after in the UK for its low-shedding, family-friendly disposition.
How hyper are Barbets?
The honest answer: Barbets are a high-energy breed, and that's not going to change. The breed's high energy level is a fixed characteristic — it comes from what the breed was developed to do. Working dogs, hunting dogs, herding dogs, and sporting dogs were bred to work all day. That drive doesn't disappear in a pet environment; it just looks for an outlet.
What does "hyper" actually mean in practice for Barbets? Without enough exercise and mental stimulation, a Barbet will find ways to discharge that energy — typically by chewing things they shouldn't, barking, jumping, pacing, or generally being difficult to live with. With adequate exercise, the same dog is often surprisingly calm and settled indoors. The breed isn't inherently troublesome — it's demanding, and that's different.
Managing a high-energy Barbet
For a high-energy Barbet, the single most effective strategy is structured exercise — not just a walk, but sustained aerobic effort that actually tires the dog. A 20-minute walk does not cover the needs of a Barbet. Off-lead running, fetch, swimming, agility, or any activity that involves genuine physical exertion is what this breed needs.
Beyond physical exercise, mental stimulation is equally important for intelligent breeds. Training sessions, puzzle feeders, scent games, and food-dispensing toys tap into the dog's brain as well as their body. A dog that's both physically and mentally tired is dramatically easier to live with than one that's only partially exercised.
Exercise requirements for Barbets
- Daily minimum: 90–120 minutes of exercise, including vigorous off-lead activity
- Mental stimulation: training sessions, scent work, puzzle feeders. Daily, not optional
- Off-lead time: essential for this breed. Lead walking alone doesn't provide adequate exercise
- Consequences of under-exercise: destructiveness, excessive barking, hyperactivity indoors, anxiety, hard-to-train behaviour
When does a Barbet calm down?
All dogs become calmer with age — the question is how much and when. For Barbets:
The peak chaos period for Barbets is typically 6–18 months — full adolescence. This is when they have adult energy levels and physical capability but haven't yet developed adult self-regulation or fully absorbed their training. Most owners of Barbets report a noticeable shift between 2–3 years of age. The dog settles, responds to training better, and is easier to live with. The energy level doesn't disappear — a Barbet will still need significant exercise at 5 or 7 years old — but the frantic quality of the adolescent period does resolve.
Full Barbet profile — exercise needs, temperament, costs and care.
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