She has NEVER been
hurt by this collar and it is used for her protection as much as mine.
Not exact matches
As I posted on Diane Ravitch's blog, I want to shake every member of the Hartford, Windham, and New London Boards of Education
by their
collars and scream out, «Are you too STUPID to see what Adamowski is doing to
hurt your children?»!
The dog learns not
by tightening real tight but a gentle pressure not to pinch or
hurt dog, the rest of training after established
collar is on is communicating with the prong, slight up / down motion... having a serious conversation with the prong
collar is only necessary at extreme point, lunging to kill a dog or persons extreme and there is no treat or tone or action that stops dog already at a 10 then a calm leash correction and removing dog away from distraction to the other side of dogs thresh hold 6ft to across the street and repeat getting closer and of course treats and a «GOOD» is needed when a job well done Now, I also work with a Old English Bull Dog named Zoey who had to go 2 months to physical therapy for her knee she had surgery on a yr ago and I used a harness
by Halti, they said no good, and a flat
collar is no good on these kind of dogs.
My dogs are not
hurt by their pinch
collars.
Training dogs
by scaring or
hurting them through physical intimidation using choke, prong, or electric shock
collars, «alpha» rolls, muzzle grabs, or throwing things (chains, water balloons) at dogs can slow training, damage the human / dog relationship, and contribute to the development of aggression as self - defense for the dog.