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No but I tried to blame her. |
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Had a beagle who loved to roam tail a-wagging. Got the invisible fence and trained the dog. She learned that there was a big shock coming if she got near the boundary, and she would slink to the line, whimpering, ears down and you could see her get the jolt, then she was happily beyond the wire and away. It was worth the shock, fully turned up, to get out and go visit the nearby elementary school to play. Smart dog. Fence failure.
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Yes. What we were told to do is determine a good spot to walk your dog out of the yard and use that spot every time. As you approach the spot, but before your dog comes into contact with the antenna signal, remove the collar. That way the dog is supposed to associate associate removal of the collar with safely leaving the yard. In practice some dogs reject going across that perceived barrier even with their collar off. Thankfully our pet is under 20 pounds so we just pick him up and carry him across when he refuses. |
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The e-fence worked very well with him, though. He often chased something up through the woods behind our house. It was an escaped farm turkey that harassed our MI neighborhood for an entire year. Both the dog and the turkey knew exactly where the fence line was. |
The only good turkey is a Thanksgiving turkey. They are nasty birds.
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The only good turkey is a Thanksgiving turkey. They are nasty birds. |
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