It’s easy to see why we don’t understand this. When it comes to sniffing, humans are pretty useless in comparison. Depending on the breed or type a dog’s sense of smell is around 10,000 - 100,000 times better than ours.
They possess up to 300 million olfactory receptors in their noses compared to about six million in ours and the part of their brains that analyses and processes scents is (proportionally) 40 times greater than ours.
While these numbers mean little to us - as we are visual and so we think and process what we see rather than being scent-aware - if you made an analogy to sight, what we can see at around a third of a mile a dog could see more than 3,000 miles away. Now are you a bit more impressed with your dog’s sense of smell?
Dogs can detect cancer cells, explosives, drugs, and track and find lost people or animals - all by using the power of their noses and the part of their brain that analyses and processes those scents.
Why do dogs spend so much time sniffing?
It’s very easy to disregard what we don’t understand but part of living with a dog is to recognise that a dog’s sense of smell is important to them in a variety of ways. First of all, it’s enjoyable. In the same way that we look around us and take pleasure in that, our dogs sniff and take equal joy in that. Secondly it is a way to find out about the environment and what (or who) it might contain - and if it is safe. And they are picking up information left by other dogs (checking their wee-mails!) - and they are processing all this ever-changing information about the area and its inhabitants while we think they are just wasting time sniffing.
Sniffing has so many benefits for your dog
As owners we need to give our dogs time to sniff. Most of us know that five minutes spent training tires our dog as much as an hour’s physical exercise but we don’t always recognise that five minutes spent sniffing does the same. It’s not just their noses that are working, it’s a large part of their brains too. For active dogs, or for dogs who start their walks totally uncontrollable and either pulling on the lead in their excitement, or else whizzing around all over the place, time spent sniffing can take the edge off their unfocussed energy.
For worried reactive dogs, sniffing can help them feel more secure - as they have spent time working out what is out there and whether it needs to be worried about or whether, far more likely, it is safe.
Perhaps more importantly, for all dogs a chance to sniff fulfils a major part of their sensory needs - as much as physical and mental exercise does and as much as play does. Sniffing makes them happy and gives them an outlet for their hard-wired natural behaviours. So often we ignore this vital part of our dogs’ needs because we just don’t understand it.
How to become ‘Nose Aware’ on your walks: