Why Not Use a Remote Dog Collar?
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Do you have a dog that's so nice to other people? Some take this as a problem - since dogs could get in trouble, or frighten a kid, or get chased by other dogs when they approach other people. It can be so annoying that the simple act of visiting your garden or backyard with your dog ends up with the dog on a leash. Some doggie discipline, it would seem, is called for - to get your overly social dog calmed down, consider getting it a remote dog training collar.
Background
If only you could make your dog to obey your wishes at the push of a button. Well, you can, with the use of a remote dog training collar. Before the idea of using transmitters and receivers for dog training came to be, obedience training for dogs was hard work and time consuming. That's because one first had to let the dog do as it wishes, including the bad behavior you want to curb, and when the dog does exactly that, you punish it. Naturally, rewards came when the dog heeded your calls.
Modern obedience training
You still need to expose the dog to the situation where it will react in the expected unwanted way, but the transmitter in your hand means it will get a static correction each time it does something you do not approve of. From avoiding to chew shoes and plants, to stopping the habit of running after cars, to not leaving your side when other pets are around - you can train your dog to stay still during all these moments.
Immediate results
Unlike some training strategies of old, with a remote dog collar, you're spared the need to yank back your dog's leash if it misbehaves. The transmitted in your hand acts as a long range leash - the range can start off at under 100 yards up to more than a thousand. So whether you have a problem toy dog or several working dogs on your farm, a remote training collar is worth the purchase.
Correction from a distance - how it works
The receiver in your dog's collar activates to release a low volt static correction. Unlike with a leash wherein you can get physically exhausted, annoyed, and even embarrassed in public for a problematic dog, a remote collar is more convenient to work with. Your dog gets "annoyed" by a static every time it behaves in unwanted ways. Over time your dog links the behavior with the onset of a static shock and soon it will avoid the behavior to be spared of the shock.