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You are here: Home / Archives for Equipment

The Risks With Having A Dog Door

March 10, 2017 by Fanna Easter

You Might Want to Rethink Installing a Dog Door

Dog Door Installation
dmussman/Adobe Stock

Installing a dog door that allows your dog access to the backyard is a personal decision. As a dog trainer, I’m not very fond of dog doors. Understand that when I’m called to address dog behavioral concerns, the dog door is usually tied to the cause. It’s not the dog door’s fault though; it’s giving your dog unlimited access to the backyard that’s the culprit.

Before your hackles rise up, allow me to explain why I dislike dog doors. Once you understand the risks from a dog trainer’s perspective, then decide if a dog door would work for your dog.

Dog Door Risks

Your Dog May Bark More

Easily, excessive dog barking is the most common behavior issue during private consults—usually coupled with aggression. When dogs have unlimited access to a dog door, they’ll learn to run outside at the slightest sound and bark. Soon, this becomes a pattern, and dogs become really good at barking at anything and everything.

After a few weeks, neighbors will start complaining about excessive barking during the day when pet owners are at work. Then, neighbors will start to complain about dogs randomly barking at night. Eventually, the barking dog will be known as a nuisance barker and Animal Control will intervene and fine the pet owners.

Usually, I’m contacted right before or after Animal Control is involved. By this time, a barking dog has had plenty of time to practice barking. He’ll have become very efficient at rushing through the dog door to address whatever noise was heard. During my private lesson consults, many pet owners swear their dogs are “protecting their properties” by barking. Honestly, a dog’s presence and 1-2 barks is enough to warn intruders. Barking incessantly is a nuisance and unnecessary.

If this sounds like your dog, it’s time to lock up the dog door and hire a dog sitter for afternoon potty breaks. Also, leave soft music playing to drown out outdoor noises and prevent your seasoned barker from practicing his barking behavior again. Provide plenty of mental enrichment toys to keep your dog’s brain busy solving puzzles instead of barking.

Your Dog May Escape

When the right motivation combines with plenty of opportunities to practice climbing a fence, a dog will scale a 6-foot fence with ease. Motivation to bark includes another barking dog, kids riding bikes, or another dog approaching the fence. Pair motivation with the ability to climb a fence, and your dog will eventually get really good at escaping your backyard.

Dogs are smart. If they can’t go over the fence, they’ll go under. Don’t be surprised if your dog escapes if you give him 24-hour access to the backyard.

RELATED: The Dangers of Invisible Dog Fences

Your Dog May Become Aggressive

While incessant barking in a backyard is a common complaint from pet owners, there’s a much more dangerous issue. When dogs are allowed unlimited outdoor access without supervision, they’ll become frustrated and learn inappropriate behaviors, such as aggression.

When dogs see other dogs walk past their fence, they’ll learn to bark and even fence fight. Some dogs become very dog aggressive just from practicing this behavior in the backyard. And at times, some dogs become aggressive to people walking near the fence or children riding their bikes on the sidewalk.

If your dog is dog or human aggressive, keep him securely indoors and away from windows. Hire a pet sitter to bring your dog potty in your securely fenced-in backyard. This way, your pet sitter can redirect or reward good behavior when your dog encounters a trigger.

Thieves and Wildlife May Intrude

Most pet owners with dog door installations scoff at the idea of thieves and wildlife entering through a dog door, but it happens. While we assume our dogs will deter thieves and wildlife, sometimes these threats are actually drawn to dogs. Thieves can pepper spray your dog and enter your house through the dog door. Or worse yet, steal your dog.

Wildlife will follow the scent of food, especially dog food left near a dog door opening. Most wildlife scavenging for food aren’t very friendly either. They can seriously harm you and your dog plus carry disease.

No Dog Door, So Now What?

Installing a dog door is a personal decision, but I do think hiring a pet sitter is a much better idea. Yes, I know it’s more expensive, but it will prevent inappropriate dog behaviors caused by unlimited and unsupervised access to your backyard. Plus, hiring a professional dog trainer who provides results are expensive. Most dog trainers charge more than $100 an hour. So dog door drama costs can add up too. 🙂

If you’re one of the lucky ones without dog door drama, count your blessings. But do know, things can change quickly and you may want to ask your neighbors or set up a camera to make sure your dog is polite when outdoors. 🙂

Filed Under: Equipment, Resources, Safety Tagged With: best dog door, dog barks dog door, dog door, dog door installation, dog door security risk, doggie door, door with dog door built in, ideal dog door, pet door, pros and cons of dog doors, should i get a dog door

The Best Affordable & Modern Fence For Dogs

March 1, 2017 by Fanna Easter

Privacy Fence for Dogs

Fence for Dogs
denboma/Adobe Stock

Good fences make good neighbors, and this applies to dogs of all sizes too. All pet owners and their dogs should enjoy the luxury of a secure fence. When selecting the best fence for dogs, choose materials that restrict visibility. While this may seem a bit secluded, this type of dog fence is key to peaceful neighbors and dogs.

Best Dog Fence Material

As a dog trainer, I highly recommend wood privacy fences. Wood is cheaper than vinyl and much stronger than PVC fencing. When constructing a wooden privacy fence, instead of placing boards side-by-side, try overlapping board edges to prevent tiny gaps. Tiny gaps will turn into larger gaps because wood dries out. Limiting visual gaps will prevent dog fence fighting behavior too, which is common in the dog world.

For a gorgeous, sleek look and a modern feel, place wooden fence boards horizontally. This may help with your home’s resale value. 🙂 Also, install boards flush to the ground to keep dogs from escaping.

When installed properly, nothing beats a sturdy 6- to 8-foot wood privacy fence that’s both modern and functional.

Finding a Fence Guy

Usually, this is the toughest part of installing a fence for dogs. Ask previous realtors for fence installer recommendations, as most have reliable and experienced construction crews on speed dial. Contact 2-3 dog fencing companies for quotes and compare for best price. Most installers will send someone out to measure your backyard and email quotes the same day.

For DIYers, there are plenty of tutorials online explaining how to install a wooden privacy fence. Plus, many hardware stores offer blueprints and step-by-step instructions. While installing a fence for dogs yourself saves thousands of dollars, it’s very labor intensive and may require rental equipment.

Never Leave Your Dog Out Alone in the Yard

Sturdy wooden privacy fences aren’t bulletproof, but they’ll prevent the majority of barking, fence fighting or escaping. A well installed fence for dogs will do its job, and the rest is up to the pet owner.

Never leave your dog outside alone. While it’s painful to hear, leaving a dog outside alone is the number one cause for several dog behaviors, including:

  • Excessive barking outdoors
  • Digging
  • Chewing
  • Escaping
  • Fence fighting

When you’re outside with your dog, you’re able to call or redirect your dog before these annoying dog behaviors begin. When dogs are able to practice a behavior, such as escaping from a fence, they get really good at it. Then, soon, a dog left alone will learn how to scale a 6-foot fence within minutes. Prevention is key. Close up that doggy door and hire a great pet sitter.

A sturdy fence will do its job, but it needs support from pet owners too.

Filed Under: Equipment, Resources Tagged With: best dog fence, best fence for dogs, best type of fence for dogs, cheap dog fence, dog escapes fence, dog fence, dog fence for fence fighting, dog fence ideas, dog jumps fence, dog proof fencing ideas, fence for digging dog, fence for escaping dog

The Dangers Of Invisible Dog Fences

February 27, 2017 by Fanna Easter

Invisible Fences for Dogs: Not as Safe as They Seem

Invisible Fences For Dogs
Steve/Adobe Stock

The proverb: “good fences make good neighbors” rings true with dogs too. Everyone needs clear and visible boundaries, and that starts with a solid and secure fence for dogs. When clients ask if invisible dog fences work, I shudder. I clearly explain to them why invisible fences for dogs don’t work and how they cause harm.

How Invisible Fences for Dogs Work

Invisible dog fences depend on an underground electric wire system to set boundaries for dogs. Rather than enclose a dog within an area using a physical barrier, such as a gate, invisible fences shock dogs whenever they approach or cross the underground wire.

Some invisible fences for dogs use small flags as physical warning markers. When dogs get close or cross those flags, they’re shocked. In addition, most invisible dog fence companies recommend setting shock collars on high and turning them down over time. This is a horrible way to teach dogs about boundaries.

Invisible Fences Don’t Protect Your Dog

Fences are made to keep certain things in and other things out. Invisible fences for dogs allow other animals into the boundary, but won’t allow your dog out to escape. For years, pet owners have tearfully described their invisible fence horror stories during our private consultations.

Invisible Fence Reviews

Once, a young Pit Bull was attacked and killed by a neighbor’s dog. Every time this poor dog tried to run away, he was shocked. Another time, a client described how coyotes carried off her small dog from her backyard. Once the small dog went missing, the pet owners replayed the security camera video and watched the horrific scene. Another story involved a hound mix that was brutally attacked my javelina pigs (wild pigs). The dog passed away shortly.

Each case could’ve been prevented with a sturdy, visible fence and pet owners being outside with their dogs. It’s only a matter of time until this happens to a defenseless dog stuck inside an invisible fence.

If these invisible dog fence reviews haven’t changed your mind yet, reputable rescue organizations won’t adopt to someone with an invisible fence.

RELATED: What to Do If You See a Tethered Dog

Invisible Fences Cause Harm

Dog shock collars hurt, and they do cause harm. Science is catching up and proving shock collars are considered dog abuse. When people insist shock collars don’t hurt, they’re wrong. As a dog trainer, I’m all too familiar with picking up the pieces after dogs have been shocked repeatedly with an invisible fence collar. This could be easily avoided.

[perfectpullquote align=”full” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]One day, he casually asked why his dog was afraid to go outside and I casually replied, “Because the backyard shocks and hurts him.”[/perfectpullquote]

Here’s an all too common story. My neighbor had an invisible fence for dogs, and he literally had to push his dog out the back door to potty. One day, he casually asked why his dog was afraid to go outside. I casually replied, “Because the backyard shocks and hurts him.” While my neighbor initially looked shocked, he shook his head and said, “You could be on to something.” Within a month, their invisible dog fence was replaced with a sturdy wooden privacy fence. This story happens every day.

Don’t Believe the Hype

Invisible fence installers will try selling you rainbow and sunshine dreams of perfectly behaved dogs happily playing in your backyard, but don’t buy into it. These dog fences are cruel and won’t protect your dog. Plus, they won’t “securely” confine your dog inside a backyard. Instead, opt for a sturdy wooden fence and keep an eye on your dog when he’s outside.

Filed Under: Clients, Equipment, Resources, Training Tagged With: above ground electric dog fence, are invisible fences cruel, best invisible fence, do invisible fences work, dog training, Dog Training Tips, electric dog fence, invisible fence, invisible fence dogs, invisible fence reviews, invisible fencing for dogs, pet safe invisible fence, shock fence dogs

Pet Tutor: The Dog Treat Dispenser You Wish You Had

January 25, 2017 by Fanna Easter

Pet Tutor Dog Treat Dispenser Review

Dog Treat Dispenser
Courtesy of Pet Tutor

Technology continues to advance within the pet industry at lightning fast speed. Several new pet-friendly apps, dog monitor camera systems and remote training devices will positively change dog training forever.

At the top of the technology heap is Smart Animal Training Systems’ Pet Tutor. The dog treat dispenser is a shining star beaming with endless pet training and enrichment opportunities for dogs. With Pet Tutor’s technology, endless options and a savvy dog trainer, this tool has the power to replace shock collars. The only limitation to the product is a dog trainer or pet owner’s imagination.

What is a Pet Tutor?

Pet Tutor is a computerized dog treat dispenser programmed with different dispensing settings, which can be controlled through a smart remote or mobile app. Pet Tutor’s tube is made of stainless steel and lexan, which is a clear and super strong polycarbonate. Lexan is so strong that it’s considered bullet resistant, and used in safety glasses.

In addition, this blue cylindrical device is mobile. You can place it on the ground, mount it to a crate or hang it from a wall with a 3M removable hook.

Setting Up Pet Tutor

Pet Tutor sets up easily, dispenses dog treats soundlessly, and offers endless mental enrichment ideas and training possibilities for your dog. It only takes a couple of seconds to set up the treat dispensing function. If you’re using the training system’s more advanced settings, such as installing a Bluetooth app, setup can take 5-6 minutes.

Dispenses All Types of Treats!

Another huge bonus is Pet Tutor will dispense different types of high value treats. Smart Animal Training Systems has a patented treat dispensing design that prevents training treats from jamming, so any type of treat can be used. Think kibble, chopped up hot dogs, diced string cheese, etc. Some animal trainers use chopped up carrots to teach horses to stand still during grooming while others are dispensing birdseed when teaching birds new behaviors.

Pet Tutor Creator

Wes Anderson created Pet Tutor as a fun game that infuses and combines positive reinforcement training principles and mental stimulation. In the past, Wes worked as an electrical engineer and statistician. He studied neuroscience with a focus on Alzheimer’s research. Recently, Wes decided to focus on another passion and became a dog trainer. Using his extensive knowledge, he designed and created Pet Tutor and committed himself to offering the latest updates as technology advances.

How Will Pet Tutor Help My Dog?

Pet Tutor is a game changer in the animal behavior world. This dog training tool can slow down fast eating dogs, offers different forms of mental stimulation and teaches a dog that barking doesn’t pay. Yes, this dog treat dispenser will certainly help dogs.

Slow Fast Eating Dogs

For fast eating dogs, Pet Tutor will slow down meals by dispensing one kibble at a time. Instead of inhaling food within seconds, dogs may take up to 20 minutes eating their meals, depending on your chosen setting. All you have to do is go on the Pet Tutor smartphone app and change the setting to dispense treats over a period of time and voila! With a few taps, you’ve maximized your dog’s mealtime.

Provide Super Powered Mental Enrichment

Take mealtimes up a notch by teaching a dog to walk over and touch a Kong Wobbler. The dog learns that touching a Kong Wobbler, that’s sitting on the ground, will dispense a treat from the device. Simply place a smartphone that has the Pet Tutor app, or remote, inside a plastic Kong Wobbler to get started!

Stop Dog Barking

Pet Tutor’s technology will dispense treats while a pet owner is away or out of sight. Using a smart remote or app, pet owners can reward dogs for quiet behavior from another room or even online. When away, you can use the training system to reward your dog’s quiet behavior for you. Dogs quickly learn that quiet behavior pays well and barking becomes a thing of the past.

Help Dogs With Separation Anxiety

Separation anxiety in dogs is much more than excessive barking; it’s a very serious issue. In short, dogs with separation anxiety panic when they’re left alone, which can result in them seriously harming themselves. The training system can certainly help with separation anxiety, but it requires the expertise of a professional dog trainer or veterinary behaviorist for best results.

Smart Animal Training Systems is committed to evolving its products as new pet technology is discovered. Pet Tutor offers remote rewards through a smartphone or tablet. Pet owners can check in on their dogs using Pet Tutor’s tablet or smartphone app. Additionally, pet owners can instantly dispense treats to reward good behavior remotely.

While many dog camera systems offer this option, there’s a slight delay between pressing the treat dispense button on a smartphone and the treat being dispensed. When changing dog behavior, timing and speed is essential.

https://youtu.be/Jrlrj62-GMY

Filed Under: Behavior, Dogs, Equipment, Resources, Training Tagged With: bored dog, dog barks in crate, dog training, Dog Training Tips, how to stop a dog from barking, how to teach a dog, how to train a dog, pet tutor, pet tutor review, slow down fast eating dog, stops dog barking, tips for bored dogs

Choosing The Right Dog Monitor Camera For Your Home

January 6, 2017 by Fanna Easter

Best Dog Monitor Cameras of 2016

Dog Monitor Cameras
gemredding/iStock

The pet industry is exploding with hi-tech gadgets due to vast advancements within technology. One such trend that’s been garnering much attention are dog monitor cameras. Checking in on the family dog became a huge benefit of home security systems, leading to the expansion of pet monitors.

From a pet owner’s perspective, home security cameras offer peace of mind. With a few clicks on a laptop or taps on a smartphone, pet owners can quickly check in to see their dogs comfortably snoozing on the sofa. Some home security system companies now offer additional pet-friendly features catering to pet owners who work long hours and have to leave their dogs home alone.

You can now find dog monitor cameras that have a two-way microphone, provide interactive laser games, send bark alerts, dispense meals and so much more.

If you’re struggling to decide on the best dog monitor for your home, check out our reviews of two popular dog cameras from the perspective of a pet owner and professional dog trainer. Both dog monitors offer plenty of bells and whistles, yet one system takes things just a bit further.

Reasons to Purchase a Dog Monitor Camera

Interactive dog camera systems were huge in 2016. When polled about why they purchased interactive dog monitor cameras, pet owners had many different reasons. Guilt was a popular reason; many pet owners felt guilty leaving their dogs home alone for 8-10 hours per day. They wanted to check in and see what their dogs were doing while they were away.

Behavior concerns were another common reason for purchasing a dog camera, especially if the dog suffered from separation anxiety. Other pet owners just missed their dogs throughout the day, so they liked the ability to check in, dispense treats, talk to their dogs or play a quick laser game.

RELATED: Free Feeding or Scheduled Feeding Dogs: Which is Best?

Furbo Dog Camera Review

Understanding pet owners wanting to interact with their dogs when they’re gone, it’s understandable why Furbo Dog Camera is considered one of the best pet monitors. Aside from its 4-star rating on Amazon, many dog trainers recommend this pet monitor.

Furbo Dog Camera Features

  • Installation: Installation is easy. All you need to do is set it up in your home and download the app on your phone.
  • HD video: It has night vision options and amazing zoom features. The video recording option can be helpful for dog training or simply sharing cute dog snoring videos with friends.
  • Treat dispenser: This dog monitor treat dispenser holds 30 treats.
  • Two-way microphone: Chat with or comfort your dog while you’re away through this interactive dog camera.
  • Bark alert: Camera sensors can detect if your dog is barking, immediately notifying you.

When choosing an interactive camera system, steer clear of laser pointing game options. Studies have shown laser games can cause obsessive compulsive behavior, which is never a good thing. It’s also best to choose dog monitor systems with high quality video recording.

Dropcam Review

Simple and easy-to-install dog monitor cameras appeal to many pet owners as well. This type of dog camera system doesn’t offer interactive dog games or treat dispensing options, but instead offer amazing video with two-way microphones to keep an eye on your dog. By far, Dropcam system easily exceeds these simple requirements. Dropcam offers crystal clear HD video with night vision options, two-way microphones, alerts and easy installation.

Where to Install Dog Monitor Cameras

Most pet owners gravitate toward interactive monitors for their dogs, but some would choose simple and effective home security cameras. Interactive dog cameras should be placed counter-height for dispensing dog treats while regular dog cameras be mounted onto the ceiling. The choice is yours.

Regardless of the dog monitor system you choose, it’s worth having peace of mind knowing your dogs are actually snoozing the day away when you’re not home.

Filed Under: Clients, Equipment, Resources, Training Tagged With: 2 way pet camera, best pet surveillance camera system, dog camera treat dispenser, dog trainer recommend pet camera system, dog training, Dog Training Tips, drop cam camera system dogs, furbo camera review dogs, furbo camera review pets, how to teach a dog, how to train a dog, interactive pet camera, pet monitor camera reviews, pet surveillance camera, pet surveillance camera reviews

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Dog Training Nation is a community of dog trainers, dog owners and dog lovers. Our mission is to provide trainers and owners valuable information to enrich dogs' lives. We cover a range of topics, from socializing puppies to dealing with aggressive dog behavior to selecting the best dog products. It is our hope you share our content to make the dog and owner world a better place.

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Dog Training Nation is a dog training blog for pet owners and dog lovers. We cover a range of topics from puppy socialization tips to dog aggression to dog health. It is our hope you share our content to make the world a better place for dogs.

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