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I have decided to write this article so I don’t have to keep
repeating myself. Once you have tried the electronic collar and
created neurotic or problem behaviors, you cannot go back and erase
them. You are now in for major retraining, so please consider carefully
before purchasing these antiquated and inhumane devises. Many of
you may say, “But my dog only had to go through the fence
line once and then always stayed in the yard. What’s the big
deal?”
There IS a big
deal and one that you may not recognize at first as relating to
the electric fence. How many times do you have to be stung by a
wasp to be terrified of wasps? I doubt more than once, but then,
how do you then feel about wasps? Are you terrified? Do you run
around frantically, screaming in a panic, trying to get away from
it? Does your heart rate go through the roof? Is this pleasant for
you?
We’ll
start out looking at this from a behavioral standpoint. Your dog
goes through the fence line and a child, dog or car happens to be
passing by. He gets zapped by a very painful electric shock. He
may very well now associate the pain of the shock with the child,
dog or car. There are two options of how he may behave around those
things now: he may become terrified and depending on his personality,
will take that terror and either become shy and fearful or aggressive.
There is a third option – he may have made no bad associations.
However, why take the risk?
Okay, you have
been stung by a wasp and now become freaked out whenever you see
one. I decide that your fear is a bad thing and want you to love
wasps. How easy will it be to then change your mind about them in
the future?
Your dog goes
through the fence line and gets zapped by a very painful electric
shock as he notices the signal flags marking the property border.
He makes the association between the intense pain and the signal
flags. From now on, he will freak out at the sight of any kind of
flag. (Yes, this really has happened.)
You have an
electric fence and you don’t see any outward sign that there
is a problem. However, a cat wanders into your yard and while your
dog “respects” the electric shock fence and stays in
the yard, you come home to find a dead cat. (Displaced aggression
from the electric shock fence.) Your dog may start to become neurotic
about weird things or become timid, fearful or aggressive. He may
start to become aggressive toward the other dogs you have. He may
now be fearful about leaving the property at all – even in
“safe” areas. He may also become fearful of new places
– especially if you use one of the “dummy” collars
and leave it on all of the time. Think about it: He has a real or
dummy collar on and you take him to a new location – maybe
even a training class. He is now freaked because he doesn’t
know where the boundaries are and is terrified of being shocked.
He moves around slowly and cautiously because he doesn’t know
where the “safe” places are.
Associative
learning is happening 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, whether
we want it to or not. Add to those associations intense pain, and
you have a recipe for disaster.
Okay, let’s
now look at the logistical problems with electric shock fences.
Notice how I don’t use the term “invisible fence?”
It is too easy to forget what they actually do – shock your
dog with an electric current - when one uses the generic terminology.
I don’t want you to forget what this device does.
You have an
electric fence. It may keep your dog within the boundaries, but
does it keep out rotten kids that want to torment your dog, other
dogs – good ones and “bad” ones, cats, skunks,
squirrels, bears, coyotes, fox or deer? Of course not. If your dog
decides to chase these things and braves the electric current running
through his neck, do you really think he’ll come back and
risk more electric current? I think not!
Let’s
say you leave your dog outside, unattended and it starts to rain.
You don’t know it is raining because you are involved with
something else or you aren’t home in the first place. These
collars malfunction quite often and then whammo! You now have either
a dead dog or one with so much neck damage, that you are now spending
thousands of dollars in vet bills. Plus you will now have a completely
and utterly freaked out dog whenever it rains.
You bring your
dog inside and his electric collar is still on. Your dog walks past
the microwave or other such appliance. There have been cases where
appliances have set the collars to shock the dogs. The dog feels
intense pain as the shock rips through his neck. Voila! He is now
freaked out with common appliances. Or perhaps part of the fence
line is close to a room he is in and he gets zapped with an electric
shock. Now he is completely freaked out because there is no safe
place for him to be in.
I hope I have
made my point against electric shock fencing. Below are some links
for you to get some further opinions about these cruel and brutal
products.
If
you don’t have time to train your dog, get a stuffed animal.
Comments
from Lisa G. about Invisible Fencing.
VISIBLE
PROBLEMS - Electronic Devices and Aversive-laden Collars Are NOT
the Ideal Fence
When
Good Products Go Bad - More Thoughts on Product Liability
UK
Parlementary Statements: Animals (Electric Shock Collars)
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