Do All Dogs Have Food Drive?

Interesting question, so let's spend a minute thinking about it.

I think we can agree that all animals must eat to survive, and that hunger is a driving force in making that happen.

But when we talk about food drive, are we really talking about hunger?  If yes, then why use yummy treats?  When I'm hungry I don't need a bowl of ice cream; I need the most filling food possible.  If a dog works for food out of hunger, then any food will do.  And since I'm not a deprivation trainer, I have no intention of allowing a dog to go hungry in order to get behaviors.  I happen to find hunger more uncomfortable than physical pain - if I have a choice between a few shots or going without food all day, I'd take the shots.  With that in mind, I will not withhold food to get my dogs to work out of "hunger".  I will, however, ask a dog to work for a meal that I plan to give to them anyway, if they are willing to work for it.  If not, they'll still get it.

So what is usable food drive?  We're talking about love of food - ice cream and snickers, not bread.  Most of my dogs enjoy delicious food.  They will eat pieces of cooked chicken even if they've just finished a huge meal.  That is because they are eating because they like food, not because they are hungry.

A dog that will eat tasty treats even though it's not hungry - that dog has usable food drive for training.  Most dogs fall into this category.

A dog that will eat any food even though it is stuffed - that dogs has a very high food drive.

And a dog that only eats when it's very hungry or in it's cozy house with no distractions?  Does that dog have usable food drive?  I'd argue "no".

Some dogs eat regardless of what is happening and others lose all appetite when they are excited.

That's Lyra.  She likes food well enough but any competing alternatives will negate her food interest.  If I starved her I'm sure there would come a point when she'd work for food even with competing interests, but why would I do that?  Is that humane?  I don't think so, especially if I can find alternatives that keep her in the game.  Honestly, if you're training for sport, it makes no sense at all to train a dog that has to be subjected to chronic deprivation in order to work.  That dog isn't cut out for competition, and that's perfectly fine.

Some trainers have never seen a dog who lacked food drive.  I'm surprised by that because I see it rather often - maybe 10% of the dogs I train do not have usable food drive.

If you've really never seen it, take a look at this video.  For background, this dog is young; about a year of age.  We have tried just about every food known to man; from kibble to tripe to cheese,  chicken, beef, etc.  both cooked and raw.  In this video, we show her favorites sitting on the floor - there for the taking.  This includes dehydrated tripe strips,  freeze dried lamb lung, and a popular cookie. As you can see, she is not overweight. At seven pounds, there would be serious ethical/medical concerns about not offering food for an extended period of time.  On the morning of this session she had not been offered breakfast, so one would expect that she would be hungry.  She has been training for several months, and is comfortable in the room.  She does know a few behaviors - touch, up, sit, down, a bit of heeling, etc.  Fortunately she has some interest in work for the sake of work, so the work causes the eating rather than the other way around.  Offering food "marks" approval rather than rewarding her.

She eats enough to keep her alive.  She eats to live; she does not live to eat.  It's important for dog trainers to recognize that this is a real phenomenon rather than suggesting that the owner just hasn't found the right food or withheld enough meals.  Finding alternatives to food is a necessary skill for a trainer, and probably the hardest thing I need to do.

In this video, you'll see that this dog could care less about the food laying around the room (which happens to include the food that is in the box).  What eventually captivates her and gets some work is the idea of "food as contest"; chasing the container, and curiosity about what might be in it.

16 comments

Lija Argals

My dogs have always loved food, but when it comes to working for it their love isn’t very consistent. Once by first dog got the idea that work was fun, then any reward is great. My new one hasn’t gotten the “fun” part yet, but I have always been able to get her driven when the food is moving. She’s a hunting breed (GSP) and always loves the thrill of chasing down a cheese ball! Same idea as the dog in the video, if the treat is fun to get then the game is on!

Caroline Moore

Thank you for writing this! I got my standard poodle when he was 7 months old, and he was almost totally uninterested in food, was afraid to play tug (he’d been too often yelled at for picking up kids’ toys in his mouth), and was distracted/overstimulated by everything in the world. When I started to transition him from the kibble he’d been eating onto a higher-quality kibble, he picked every one of the old kibbles out of the bowl and left the new ones behind.

He’s now 3 years old, and after lots of hard work (and lots of great advice gleaned from your blog and Susan Garrett’s) I’ve got a dog who has some food drive, but will also work for toy play, personal play, physical contact, and the opportunity to do well-known trained behaviors. It’s been tough (and I’ve often doubted my abilities as a trainer), but it’s made me a much better trainer. I find myself more easily able to work with new dogs, since I am well practiced at using my voice and movements as reinforcers.

I also want to put out there that some dogs are just motivated by different foods than “the usual.” My dog still thinks most real meat is not food (he’ll spit it out or not even take it in his mouth), but he’d leap over burning coals for a bite of apple or banana or peach. But as he gets older, he’s accepting more and more new foods, especially if he sees other dogs eating them.

Ziv Gigus

I have interacted with quite a few dogs that were either too timid to eat or were supposedly picky. Unless the dog is super timid I found that the “right” treat does the trick. “Right”
can either be something tasty that’s new to the dog (Wellness Venison treats most recently) and sometime you have to go all the way to the fat trimming off a costco rotisserie chicken. Alphonse, my 16mo old bernse is definitely food motivated, but when I was teaching him to swim (he did not like the idea at all) it took chicken trimmings to convince him to get into the pool.

Carla Baker

I’ve worked with a few dogs that weren’t food motivated. All but one were herding or sighthounds, plus, amazingly, one Dalmatian. All of my Dals have loved food and would split a seam to earn more. The current darling is the same way, but just the same, I am always exploring new delectibles. The current favorite is marshmallows.

Connie Kaplan

That is really cool and interesting. Since I’m relatively new to dog training, all I can say is that my dog is awesome! She is not a chow hound and doesn’t overeat, but she will work for food and likes some stuff better than others. For a new trainer I think it would have been challenging/frustrating to have a dog that doesn’t have much food drive. I’m glad to have food as a tool to work with as I’m still learning how to use all the tools available to me to train Soba.

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