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Good with kids high energy

Are Treeing Walker Coonhounds good with kids?

Treeing Walker Coonhounds are generally excellent with children. They're confident and sociable by nature — qualities that make them well-suited to the unpredictable world of family life with kids.

Treeing Walker Coonhounds are good family dogs
Their confident and sociable temperament makes them well-suited to family life. Supervision is still important, especially with toddlers.

The honest answer on Treeing Walker Coonhounds and children

Treeing Walker Coonhounds are one of the better choices for families with children. Their tolerant nature, loyal temperament, and high energy level combine well with the demands of family life.

"Good with kids" doesn't mean supervision is optional. Even the most family-friendly dog can be pushed past its limits by unpredictable child behaviour — tail-pulling, loud noise at close range, interrupted sleep. No dog should ever be left alone with a child under 10, regardless of breed.

The high energy of Treeing Walker Coonhounds is actually an advantage with children who like to play. They can keep up with kids for hours — fetch, running, rough-and-tumble — without wearing out first. For an active family, that energy is a feature, not a problem.

Confidence means an unpredictable child movement is less likely to trigger a fear response. Predictable temperament around unpredictable people is a real safety asset. Sociable dogs thrive on the activity and noise of family life rather than tolerating it. Busy households with multiple children tend to suit this temperament well. High energy is an asset with active older children who want a real play partner. With toddlers it requires more management, since the dog's natural pace can overwhelm small kids. Strong family loyalty creates a natural protectiveness toward children in the household, without training or direction.

With toddlers and very young children (under 5)

Are Treeing Walker Coonhounds safe around toddlers?
Treeing Walker Coonhounds are gentle, but their size is the main risk with very young children. A large, excited dog jumping up or charging past a two-year-old can knock them over before anyone has time to intervene. It's not aggression — it's pure physics. Always supervise interactions with children under 5, and teach the dog not to jump from puppyhood.

With older children (ages 6–12)

Are Treeing Walker Coonhounds good with school-age children?
This is where Treeing Walker Coonhounds really shine as family dogs. Children aged 6 and above are generally able to understand how to interact with dogs respectfully — they can learn commands, participate in feeding and training, and build a genuine bond. The Treeing Walker Coonhound's high energy is a perfect match for this age group — they want the same things from life. A Treeing Walker Coonhound and a 8-year-old tend to bring out the best in each other.

Key traits that matter for families

Temperament
confident, sociable, brave
Energy
High — matches active kids
Training
Moderate — some patience needed
Size
Large (22–32kg)

How to set your Treeing Walker Coonhound and kids up for success

Breed temperament is a starting point — how you manage the relationship matters just as much.

  • Socialise early. Expose puppies to children of different ages from 8–16 weeks. Early positive experiences build lasting tolerance.
  • Teach children dog rules. No pulling ears, tails, or fur. No approaching a dog that's eating, sleeping, or unwell. No staring directly in the eyes.
  • Give the dog an escape route. Always provide a quiet space (crate, bed in another room) where the dog can retreat from children. A dog that can always escape rarely needs to escalate.
  • Involve older children in training. Kids who can give commands and get responses feel respected by the dog. The dog learns to listen to them too.
  • Never leave any dog alone with young children. Regardless of breed, track record, or temperament. Incidents happen in seconds.

See the full Treeing Walker Coonhound profile — temperament, costs, training and more.

Read the complete Treeing Walker Coonhound breed guide →

More questions about Treeing Walker Coonhounds and children

Should I get a Treeing Walker Coonhound if I have a baby on the way?
Getting a Treeing Walker Coonhound puppy when you have or are expecting a baby is a lot to take on simultaneously — both require significant time and attention. If your heart is set on a Treeing Walker Coonhound, waiting until the child is 2–3 years old and the training basics are established makes everything easier.
Are male or female Treeing Walker Coonhounds better with children?
Individual temperament matters far more than sex. Properly socialised Treeing Walker Coonhounds of both sexes can be excellent with children. The breeder's assessment of each puppy's character is more useful than a gender preference.
What age should children be before you get a Treeing Walker Coonhound?
There's no hard rule, but having children aged 5 or above makes the introduction significantly easier — they can understand basic dog rules and participate in the process. Treeing Walker Coonhounds can work with younger children too, but require more active management.
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