Do Treeing Walker Coonhounds bark a lot?
Yes. Treeing Walker Coonhounds are a vocal breed. This is a real consideration if you live in a flat, a semi, or anywhere with close neighbours. The barking can be managed but not eliminated — it's part of who they are.
An American breed prized for its speed and endurance in treeing game. The Treeing Walker is a gregarious, competitive dog that needs room to run.
How much do Treeing Walker Coonhounds bark?
Treeing Walker Coonhounds are a vocal breed — this is part of who they are, not a behaviour problem. They bark at strangers approaching the home, unfamiliar sounds, other dogs, other animals, and sometimes at things you can't identify.
Some of this is manageable through training. A reliable "quiet" command, properly taught, can interrupt barking episodes. But the underlying tendency to bark is deeply wired — expect to manage it, not cure it.
If you live in a flat, a flat with shared walls, or anywhere with close neighbours, this is a serious consideration before you buy a Treeing Walker Coonhound. Noise complaints are a common reason dogs end up rehomed.
Confident dogs bark to communicate, not from anxiety. That distinction matters because purposeful barking is more manageable than reactive barking from fear. Sociable dogs produce greeting barks and excitement noise that may surprise owners who expected only alert barking. People arriving at the door produce a full response. Under-exercised high-energy dogs often redirect that unspent energy into vocalisation. An exercised dog of this type is a significantly quieter dog. Loyalty drives alert barking when something actually feels wrong. The trade-off is that any perceived threat to the family will get a vocal response.
What triggers Treeing Walker Coonhounds to bark?
- Strangers approaching the home or territory. A major trigger; this is an alert breed
- Other dogs or animals — common, particularly in breeds with prey drive or territorial instincts
- Unfamiliar sounds. Traffic, doors, other dogs barking in the distance
- Being left alone. Separation anxiety is a common driver of excessive barking in this type of breed
- Boredom or under-stimulation — a mentally under-exercised Treeing Walker Coonhound will find their own entertainment, and that often means barking
Do Treeing Walker Coonhounds suit flat living?
It's not impossible, but it requires:
- Serious commitment to separation anxiety training from day one
- Adequate exercise to reduce stress-barking (90+ minutes daily)
- Good neighbours who you've spoken to honestly
- Willingness to act on noise complaints rather than dismiss them
How to manage barking in Treeing Walker Coonhounds
You can reduce barking — you can't eliminate it with a vocal breed. Here's what actually helps:
- Desensitise to common triggers. If the dog barks at the doorbell, work specifically on that. Repeated neutral exposure to the trigger, paired with rewards for calm behaviour, reduces the intensity of the response over time.
- Teach "quiet" early. Reward brief silences during barking episodes. Build the duration. Be consistent: reward silence, never reward barking with attention (even telling them to stop is attention).
- Prevent the rehearsal. Every time a dog barks at something and feels successful (the person walks away, the perceived threat disappears), the behaviour is reinforced. Reduce the dog's ability to rehearse the behaviour. Use barriers to restrict sightlines if window-barking is a problem.
- Mental stimulation reduces anxiety barking. Puzzle feeders, training sessions, and scent games give the brain something to do that isn't inventing reasons to bark.
- Never punish barking. Shock collars, citronella collars, and shouting create anxiety that usually makes barking worse over time, not better.
Full Treeing Walker Coonhound profile — temperament, shedding, training and costs.
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