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-   -   Company Comparison for an invisible fence installer (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/all-about-pets-120/company-comparison-invisible-fence-installer-167656/)

dbussone 10-25-2015 03:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by golfing eagles (Post 1135349)
did your spouse put it there?


No but I tried to blame her.

golfing eagles 10-25-2015 04:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dbussone (Post 1135408)
No but I tried to blame her.

Of course isn't that SOP, carried on the Y chromosome?

rxatkin 11-02-2015 12:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barefoot (Post 1134421)
We used Dogwatch from Ocala for our invisible fencing. Evan, from Dogwatch, was just great at helping us with the training. Please be sure to always supervise your dog, because even with invisible fencing, predators can come on your property. We use invisible fencing in our back yard only.

The critical thing about invisible fencing is to do the training. Even if it doesn't makes sense to you, it makes sense to the dogs. They learn the boundaries marked by the flags, and then they connect the boundary lines with the warning signal. We turned the system to the lowest level so a correction would be a surprise tingle, not a shock. I tried the collar on my arm before purchasing the system from Dogwatch. Our dogs required only one correction each, and thereafter avoided the boundaries when they heard the beep warning.

And here is (to me) an amazing thing .... After being away for six months, I let the dogs out in the yard because I didn't realize that Fireboy hadn't activated the system yet. And both dogs totally avoided the boundaries, even without warning beeps! Not that I'm recommending that ... it was stupid on my part. But it just shows how they memorize the boundaries and avoid them.

Any idea of what it cost you to set the whole thing up? As I understand it, the batteries in the collar are an issue as well. Do you find yourself having to be constantly changing out batteries?

rxatkin 11-02-2015 12:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by John_W (Post 1134286)
If you do get the invisible fence, remember it will keep your dog in your yard but it cannot keep other animals out of your yard. If it was my dog, and with the possibility of other dogs getting free and roaming the neighborhood, and coyotes, alligators and even hawks all in TV, I wouldn't trust leaving my dog unattended.

Another problem is strangers will not know your dog's situation unless you post a sign, and they may feel the dog has gotten loose. We have a neighbor that has probably the largest great dane I have ever seen and it's black and white colored. It's head would be to my shoulders and it has to weight 150 to 200 pounds or more. They have invisible fence all the way around the front yard and whenever we walk down Odessa Circle and I see the dog in the front yard free, it still scares the heckout of me and my wife won't even walk down that street when he is out. It looks like this, but bigger and usually stands in the driveway looking out like he is on guard.



http://www.examiner.com/images/blog/.../ezra32506.jpg

Thanks for your pointers. We've got a beagle so she isn't too imposing. Up until now, she's always had a doggie door to get out into our yard which has always been fenced. This is a whole new concept for both our dog and us.

rxatkin 11-02-2015 12:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dbussone (Post 1135345)
I got zapped by one when I crossed the boundary. Had my dog's collar in my hand.

So, I guess you have to remove the dog's collar when you take them out of the yard, for a walk, for instance?

rxatkin 11-02-2015 12:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Opmoochler (Post 1135318)
Donnie Ray from Invisible Fence was easy to work with, very helpful, and our lab learned quickly. Within 3 weeks, all flags, but 1 were removed. We have left one by the lanai door to remind him to turn as he goes out the door. It's funny to watch him go down the sides of the house as close to the wall as possible to avoid the boundary as he travels from the back yard to the front!

Did you compare one brand or company to any other? Why did you pick the company that you did?

blueash 11-02-2015 01:18 PM

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.

dbussone 11-02-2015 03:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rxatkin (Post 1139223)
So, I guess you have to remove the dog's collar when you take them out of the yard, for a walk, for instance?


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.

CFrance 11-02-2015 04:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rubicon (Post 1134437)
I tripped over one of those invisible fences the other day

:laugh::laugh:

CFrance 11-02-2015 04:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dbussone (Post 1139316)
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.

Our first golden was one such dog. He never did get the "magic door" part of the training.

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.

dbussone 11-02-2015 04:44 PM

The only good turkey is a Thanksgiving turkey. They are nasty birds.

CFrance 11-02-2015 05:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dbussone (Post 1139361)
The only good turkey is a Thanksgiving turkey. They are nasty birds.

You can say that again.

dbussone 11-02-2015 05:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CFrance (Post 1139383)
You can say that again.


The only good turkey is a Thanksgiving turkey. They are nasty birds.

CFrance 11-02-2015 05:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dbussone (Post 1139412)
The only good turkey is a Thanksgiving turkey. They are nasty birds.

;););)

Barefoot 11-02-2015 07:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dbussone (Post 1139361)
The only good turkey is a Thanksgiving turkey. They are nasty birds.

Quote:

Originally Posted by CFrance (Post 1139383)
You can say that again.

Quote:

Originally Posted by dbussone (Post 1139412)
The only good turkey is a Thanksgiving turkey. They are nasty birds.

You two should go on the stage together. :bigbow:


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