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by Q Man on 02 May 2010 - 20:05

by steve1 on 02 May 2010 - 20:05
Still no idea who she is does she have a pen name
Steve1

by Q Man on 02 May 2010 - 20:05
~Bob~

by Q Man on 02 May 2010 - 20:05

by GSDtravels on 02 May 2010 - 20:05
by 1doggie2 on 02 May 2010 - 22:05
by beast on 03 May 2010 - 00:05
Sueincc : Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions. Clear, concise and to the point. I would be interested in hearing the answers of others who have used this tool.
Qman: I agree with you in regards to the misuse of tools. If used correctly, I believe all tools can be used without inflicting pain onto an animal. Unfortunately, many people haven't a clue how to apply the use of a tool, safely and effectively in a training program. They are often used as methods to severely coerce dogs into compliance - this I am strongly against. Though I choose not to use training collars, I respect the opinion of those who do use them.....as long as they use them appropriately and do not rely on them as the cornerstone of their training regime. I enjoy learning about the proper applications of these training aids.
Good thread, I hope more people add to it.

by Wolfinbok on 03 May 2010 - 16:05
This is how the dog associates the behavior too the correction or reward.
The other thing that was brought out was off leash work. To anyone who
is seriously thinking of competing, you must have a very good understanding of this devise.
And what it is you are asking your dog to do.
Having said that I have dogs I have never used the E collar on, they are
are a mixed Kelpie, Boarder Collie. They are so good at what they do
(stock work) that the old dogs teach the young dogs most of what I
ask out of them. They live to work. So if you have dogs like that I would
not find it at all strange that you don't use the E collar. But GSD, Malinois,
Rottweilers, I highly recommend it.
By the way my stock dogs are smarter than most people I have ever met.
Me included.

by 4pack on 03 May 2010 - 16:05
http://www.dobbsdogs.com/catalog/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=513
by TessJ10 on 03 May 2010 - 19:05
Schutzhund USA magazine had just this information in the last issue, so the information is not a secret and is certainly out there. It explained that it is an extension of the leash. Most trainers have the dog wear the collar for up to 2 weeks before it's ever used. The dog only wears the collar. It is turned off. When you start, you use it in conjunction with a leash correction. Set on the lowest setting. Some dogs only ever need pager, or setting at 20. You do a leash correction and a nick at the same time.
"If you use a low setting, why are there multiple settings and when do you use it at the highest, if ever?"
There are multiple settings because all dogs are different. I have a big 90 lb. male who responds at 30 with an ear flick - enough to serve as a correction, that's all he needs. 30 was initially; now 20 or pager. But I'm sure there are some dogs out there who need a higher setting. INITIALLY. So even though I never go above 30, the remote can go higher. My dogs don't need it, someone else's dogs may totally blow them off at 30 or higher, and one day I might have a dog who needs a higher setting. That's why they're made with a wide range of settings.
Bernhard Flinks in a seminar pointed out that properly used, an e-collar is not like a prong collar, which bruises. He said we don't see the bruises under the fur, but those collars can bruise, and you know what that feels like for days afterwards if you have a bruise and it gets touched. So how do you think the dog feels when it's had non-e-collar corrections, and then works for the next days with bruises? That hurts a lot more than an e-collar does. I thought that was a pretty good point.
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