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> We have used both a halti and a gentle leader with our bernese and gordon setter. The gentle leader was best with the bernese and the halti with the setter. <IMG class=qButton title="Quote selected text" height=10 alt="Quote selected text" src="/images/mi_quote.gif" width=20>
> she hates it but doesnt respond to a normal collar, half choke, full choke, and a harness is no use for a dog of this size.
(making a lead with a clip at each end)
and I clip the leather lead to his collar and the long-line to his harness, I loop up the slack up to make the leads short for pavement walking. (have it in sight at dogs meal times, dog sniffs halti gets a treat, dog wears halti in the house gets a treat etc...)
then he happily wore it on walks. (OK, so we're still working on slack-lead walking when dogs are running around him, but he still makes me very proud :) )
is down to LOTS of reward-based training, and I have used the harness/collar as simply somthing to keep hold of him by whilst training.
> its getting her to walk forward not rear and not claw her face off is the issue
> she's about 32 inches at the shoulder
>> she's about 32 inches at the shoulder
> wow, I take it she's quite young, so she'll be getting taller than that!!!!
> yeh shes only 20 months at he moment so yes still has growing left to do
> and a harness is no use for a dog of this size
>
> I walk our pyrenees on a harness, absolutely no problem at all.
> I walk our 60 kg-pyrenees on a harness, absolutely no problem at all.
>
> You could try a harness and normal collar, then clip one end of a double ended lead on the harness and the other end on the collar. This gives you alot more "stearing power" and often makes it easier to make dogs walk nicely as they are better balanced and you have two contact points that you can influence.
>
> Ill get a size 7
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