Find your perfect puppy at Champdogs
The UK's leading pedigree dog breeder website for over 25 years
> If it's anything like static shocks, I can imagine how unpleasant it is.
> In what training activities is it necessary to inflict any sort of pain surely there must be another way.
> Also of interest, do you have to find a sample of each snake your dog may come across and 'train' him that this particular creature will give him pain
> dog is not hurt only surprised and with a clicker only pleasure or antisipation.
> hardly the response you want in your dog if it happens on a deadly snake
>> dog is not hurt only surprised and with a clicker only pleasure or antisipation.
> hardly the response you want in your dog if it happens on a deadly snake :-(
> first find your snake, the poor dog may wear one of these collars for years before encountering a snake and if or when you did need it the battery would have run out.
> Do you think a dog trained to avoid something in a cage would recognise it as the same thing it would stumble across under a stone? And even if it did I still can't see why a cruel training method would be used when other would work just as well if not better.
> Tell me do you have to sensitise the dog to every snake it might encounter, no problem here because there is only one problem snake and that is more likely to be trod on rather than deliberately attacked, in fact, I would have thought that would apply to most snakes.
> Personally I don't mind static shocks (I don't like them, but I don't find them painfull), for some reason if I wear a specific pare of shoes & sit in a plastic garden chair shuffling my feet I can 'charge' myself up, I then just need to point at my OH and I can send such a static shock to him there is even a blue spark!! I can do it from over 1ft away!! :-) He gets frustrated because he can't do it back
> PML!! "Mastiff lover casts magic missile!"
> Tell me, if you were in an area that had deadly snakes, would you clicker-train your dog in the presence of an uncaged snake? or would you prefer to use a caged snake? or would you not bother as an accidental encounter would end in a bite reagrdless?
> just told my friend about that, he says you should learn to do it like the emperor in star wars and shoot lightning out your hands- use the force mastifflover!
> Do you think a dog trained to avoid something in a cage would recognise it as the same thing it would stumble across under a stone?
> Tell me, if you were in an area that had deadly snakes, would you clicker-train your dog in the presence of an uncaged snake? or would you prefer to use a caged snake? or would you not bother as an accidental encounter would end in a bite reagrdless?
> If you clicker-train snake avoidence is it 100% reliable if the owner/handler is out of sight, or does the dog associate the handler/owner with the pleasure of reward in which case the owner/handler has to be in sight for it to work?
> That question can be reversed... If you electic collar train snake avoidance does the dog associate the owner with the punishment of a shock and the owners needs to be in sight for it to work?
>
> I'd not train against snakes at all. I'd treat the deadly snake area as I would a field of sheep and either avoid it or keep my dogs on lead.
> That question can be reversed... If you electic collar train snake avoidance does the dog associate the owner with the punishment of a shock and the owners needs to be in sight for it to work?
> I think I saw the programme that Mastiff? saw and I couldn't tell if the dog was avoiding the snake or the cage.
>
> That question can be reversed... If you electic collar train snake avoidance does the dog associate the owner with the punishment of a shock and the owners needs to be in sight for it to work?
>
> That's all well and good, but if you live in a country where snakes even frequent your own garden it's a little harder avoiding them :-(
> The one I saw was on Cesar Milan - the dog was rather small for a Mastiff - it was Daddy the pitbull, 2 zaps and he didn't want to be anywhere near that snake, he went round the edge of the field to avoid it.
> That's my point. I DON'T live in a country with deadly snakes all over my garden and never will so I can't understand why you're trying to convince me I must do this training with my dogs.
> That's the programme I saw (and I was referring to you Mastiff-whatever, not the breed of dog).
> I agree with Nova, I would also question how we (the owners) could see if our dog was encountering a snake? My boys take off and sniff around and I'm not always within snake seeing distance
> Would you like to link to other methods that have also been successful in aversion therapy, after all most of us would rather our dogs avoided sheep and electric shocks, snakes not being a big problem.
> I am sorry, I thought the disscussion was about e-collars not avoiding sheep
> so far I can't see why it is needed for a snake when it is not needed for anything else,
Powered by mwForum 2.29.6 © 1999-2015 Markus Wichitill