FAST Delivered Dog Fence Batteries and Supplies
batteries, nylon collars, professional grade splice kits and wire
(973) 442 - 1111 (201) 652-7800 (908) 203 - 1123
EMAIL US HERE SAME Northern NJ LOCATION SINCE 1991 !!
Your Pet Containment System Needs Are Here!
| Gentlesteps
training was written by Hidden Fence Owner Rich Weinssen for the
national Pet Stop® dealer network. We recommend this training approach
as a model, and tailor individual programs for the dogs we train in
person. Introduction Prepare for the training • Place collar on your dog 1 hour or more before training session and remove 1 hour after each training session.
• A session consists of 10-20 minutes of training followed by 10-20 minutes of play in the yard, 2 or more times daily. • GentleSteps may take a few days up to a few weeks, plus supervised time ongoing. • Begin each session by preparing some outstanding treats. (Try this! Cut up many small pieces of human grade beef or chicken.) • Training starts in the yard with some treat rewarded basic commands, like sit, look up for your name, etc. Continue with treats, ball or toy play and belly rubs well after fence training is completed. • In any session, if dog seems particularly stressed for more than a minute or two, (eyes wide, panting, agitated, frantic, tail tucked, pulling towards house, etc), take the collar off and spend extra time near the flag line to calm your pet fully (10-20 minutes after the last correction) with belly rubs, back scratches, treats and your own enthusiasm before going inside. • Demonstrating sad or sympathetic behavior at any time can confirm for the dog that something is wrong, whereas a happy, playful, treat-generous handler will improve a pet’s mood more efficiently. • Don’t use a containment system for a dog with existing or developing aggression problems. We recommend professional training help first. |
| Training Guidelines
Training Step 1. Teach your pet to turn the gentle stimulation on and off. This step allows your pet to make and learn from mistakes using gentle pressure. Average collar setting: 1-3, increased incrementally. 6’-20’ Leash on dog, held by handler. Handler allows dog to go no more than 2-3 feet into avoidance zone.
Step 2. Increase temptations and collar setting as your pet increasingly avoids the flags. Average collar setting: 3-6, increased incrementally. 6’-20’ Leash on dog, held by handler. |
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| Use increased temptations, as your pet should now avoid the flags for mild distractions. Along with increased collar settings, handler should increase treats and play time. Temptations may include a family member walking quickly and playfully about 10’ outside the flag line, with dog and handler walking along flag line about 20’ behind family member. Pet may make multiple attempts to cross the flag line. Handler should keep mistakes brief and follow with cheer and treats. Alternatively, in the event handler is working alone, toys thrown past the line can serve as temptations. Also watch for passing neighbors, note bus stop schedules and look for neighbor activity that could serve as real world temptations. Repeat this step to strengthen flag line avoidance even with moderate real world temptations. Progress to step 3 when your pet avoids the flags for moderate temptations and shows comfort 5-6 feet from the flags. ------------------------------------------ |
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| Step 3. Use maintenance level collar settings and real world temptations to strengthen avoidance. Average collar setting: 6-9, increased incrementally. (Concentrate now on areas your pet would most likely escape from.) 6’-20’ Leash on dog, held by handler to prevent longer duration corrections at these higher levels. After 1-2 corrections have been felt and pet is avoiding for all available temptations, allow 20’ leash to drag on ground as dog is supervised and temptations continue. Real world temptations should include family members walking away from the property, dogs outside the yard, bicycles, children, balls thrown past flags, etc. Even watch for deer, rabbits, squirrels etc. if they excite your pet and use them for temptations. This step will teach your pet to avoid the yard edge even for highly tempting real world distractions. When your pet rejects each real world temptation 3-4 times consecutively, they are ready for step 4, supervised off leash play time. ------------------------------------------ |
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| Step 4. Supervised freedom. Your pet should be outside 30-60 minutes per day if possible. Goal: Your pet should avoid flags despite major distractions, but remain comfortable 3-6 feet into the safe zone for at least 60 days. You are ready to allow your pet free run of the yard when your pet has not felt any corrections for at least 2-4 weeks. Flag removal: Between 30-60 days, remove every other flag. Then every few days remove a few more until they are gone. (Increase supervision during flag removal stage.) ------------------------------------------ |
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| Ongoing Responsibilities • Check system monthly, by walking dog collar to edge of yard and identifying where it beeps. • Replace batteries at 4-6 month intervals, or when battery light flashes. • Make sure collar is snug fitting, high on the neck near the ears and removed daily. • Do not turn down the transmitter. The two digit reading relates to distance from the wire, not correction level. • Contact Hidden Fence Company any time your Pet Stop system fails to perform properly |