Dog Shock Collar – for the Best Training Results
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You want to enforce some rules whether your dog is in the house or out with you on the park. So you have a list, drawn, from experience, about what counts as acceptable and unacceptable behavior from your dog. Enter the no-bark collar.
Getting your dog used to wearing the collar is to be a project between pet and owner.
There is one particularly recommended unit available - dog shock collar.
Is it your first time buying shock collars? Here's a quick guide.
There are three categories of bark collars. These three types are easy to remember - static, sonic, and spray. The shock collar type, also known as the static correction type, releases a harmless low volt currect as the deterrent stimulus. The sonic type uses a high-pitched tone that is annoying to dogs - a sound only dogs can hear, since it's beyond the range of normal human hearing. The spray type releases a harmless, scented chemical that annoys dogs, which have a sophisticated sense of smell. The most popular right now is the static or shock collar.
Bark or no-bark collars are also of the automatic type, meaning they trigger based on the sound or vibration they receive from the dog. This is how the dog shock collar triggers when your dog engages in that unruly behavior - barking.
As for whether static correction collars are inhumane, assuredly there are. It need to be kept in mind that the degree of shock static correction collars give off are no more painful than static electricity from a carpet. The reason why static collars enjoy a popularity among dog owners is due to the results in brings in curbing a dog's barking.
That's because the shock received is a good way to interrupt and therefore deter barking, which is exactly what owners expect. Many websites selling dog supplies show satisfied customers' testimonials about the effects of shock collars on their dogs - a noticeably more bahaved one because of the shock stimulus.
One may have to keep in mind, also, that no bark collars are designed only to correct one type of behavior, and that is barking. When one needs a more general obedience tool, one that's used on the working dogs or hunting dogs, one needs training collars. Remote training collars belong to this category, of which there is also a static correction type. The key difference between no bark collars and remote training collars is that the latter is activated by a dog owner-held remote control.