| Reminds me of the post about the neighbor who complained about a light inside the OP’s house. What’s with this idea that you should get to control what happens inside another person’s house so you aren’t annoyed? I really think some of these people need to move to more rural areas for the good of everyone. |
Omg DCUM’s very own Pet Therapist. This is gold! |
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Why do people with 2-year-olds allow their kids to run loose and screaming around a store during a pandemic? Why don't they control their children?
I can play this game too, OP. |
| The level of hate for dogs on DCUM never ceases to amaze me. The dog a couple doors down barks at the window any time someone walks by. Is it annoying for the 10 seconds I’m walking by their house? Sure. Is it a big deal or do I feel threatened? Absolutely not. |
| I don't care if dogs bark inside someone's home. I don't like it when dogs bark AT me or my family. |
Well... this doesn't really have anything to do with what we're talking about? So, maybe you're just defensive because you haven't trained your dog. |
PP you replied to. I see what you mean, and I agree with you up to a point. I'm not against bark collars, but they are supposed to be used with human supervision, so if the owners leave the house to go to work, and the dog is at home all day, I don't think they want to put a bark collar on their dog, or crate him all day (which would perhaps make it worse if the barking comes from anxiety). I'm just seeing a lot of situations where a dog owner would not be able to to control the barking without some risk. My dog, when he was a teen, did bark when we left him in the house. The neighbor said it didn't bother him, but I didn't want to make it into a habit: so I put a bark collar on him a couple of times, pretended to leave, and observed him. He learned quickly because we nipped it in the bud, and he's not actually a breed that barks - he was just trying something. We didn't have to use it more than twice! But I completely understand that a lot of people don't want to use aversive techniques on their dogs, and that a lot of dogs may be more ingrained in their habits, or be genetically inclined to expressing themselves out loud. My dog howls like a wolf when my daughter plays violin. We love it, except when she needs to record for an audition or competition, and then the dog needs to sit out on the porch, so he doesn't hear the violin and stops howling
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Same dog, same behavior for me. We tried a couple bark collars and they work for about 10 minutes before she decides to just put up with the noise and vibration. Sorry. |
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| Just walk on by. My dog barks like this for 10 seconds and stops. Unless you stand there talking to her. She doesn't find your voice calming or soothing. Do not attempt to pet her. Please just move on. |
We don’t care! Judge away! |
Then your dog doesn't view the collar as a consequence. It would be like if your kid did something you didn't like (called you a b) and you said "don't do that," and your kid kept doing it. Obviously, saying "don't do that" is not working. You need to try something else. |
I will thanks! |
So, you want her to aggressively bark at people and then "win" because she scared them away. Good strategy. |
| Don't be that person. Just train your dog. |