YaegerWingard490

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First, the negative should happen right as he is jumping up on the fence. 2nd, it must be inspirational. Kinda like each time a cop gives you a for speeding, nevertheless the ticket is only for $2, you'll probably wait until you get 100 tickets before you even consider changing your behavior. But, if it's an excellent $250 solution,...

Essentially, your dog needs to associate a negative experience with getting through to the fence. But, this bad experience will need to have three things opting for it.

First, the negative should happen right as he is getting through to the wall. Second, it should be motivational. Kinda like whenever a cop offers you a for speeding, however the ticket is for $2, you'll possibly wait until you get 100 tickets before you even consider changing your behavior. But, if it is a good $250 ticket, it'll maybe not take a lot of (maybe a couple of) to make you stop speeding.

Put simply, you need to find your dog's awareness level. For behavior change, I had tend to error privately of slightly over correcting, instead of under correcting. You do not care if canine never gets on the fence again, and you do not care if he has when it comes to it a poor attitude. (Unlike behavior exercises.) Main point here is that the correction must be inspirational.

And next, he must get every time to the correction he does the behavior. Again, if it is a motivational correction, he will only try it once, twice, or at the absolute most, three or four times before deciding it is perhaps not in his best interest.

What in case you do? Several things can be tryed by you. Have a youngster cover on the other side of the wall with a higher powered garden hose. Lure him to jump through to the wall. When he does, blast him!

You can also set him up with an exercise collar and bill (short leash) and go out and give a modification to him when he does it, but make sure you hold the dog confined when you can't be there to improve the behavior.

Through the night, confine him to either a cage or perhaps a dog run... so he is able to not do the behavior and not get fixed for this. (Or in the event that you leave him unsupervised.), and head out to dinner

Till he drops the behavior, he can't be permitted to do it and not get fixed. So, everytime he has an opportunity to do it, you should maintain a posture to correct him.

You can find at least three more ways to do that.

1.) Take a sunday afternoon. Set the receiver collar, and the 1 foot lead on the dog, and keep him in the backyard.... but keep your eye on him through your kitchen window. Have the kid in the next property create a ruckus, and when the dog gets on the fence, you immediately scream "No, no, no!" as you go out the door, and as much as canine, and correct. (No, no, no forces him to remember what he's being fixed for.) Even when he's no longer got his toes on the wall, he must be able to connect the correction with the conduct (within 7 to 12 seconds after the fact.)

2.) You will get a boundary and edge electric fence, similar to what Gene described. The collar is likely to be triggered when he leaps up on the wall. Or you certainly can do the same with an electronic collar. Set the collar to your dogs awareness level (check the manual ).... and observe him through the window. Once the dog jumps on the wall, the button is pushed by you. Before he never gets on the wall again shouldn't simply take a lot more than finding him twice.

3.) The poor man's solution is always to glue mouse traps (not rat traps!) to the top of the fence, so when the dog jumps up.... "snap!" he receives a poor. This works well for house plants, too!

That's all for the time being, folks!

Adam

Dogproblems.com invisible fence

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