Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I have the exact same issue with my Golden Retriever who is now almost 2 and shows no signs of stopping. We have tried working with a trainer but, of course, he doesn't do this behavior when the trainer is around.
Things that have helped:
a chain leash - not a fun to grab
causing a diversion - "look a squirrel!"
using a shock collar - he tends to behave much better when we put it on him though sometimes it does not deter him. We almost never actually shock him with it unless he's really bad and even then, he can keep going.
I wish I knew what else to say. Sometimes it's so bad that my kids come home in tears from walking him.
OP here. Thanks for these tips! I’m going to try using a metal leash.
Anonymous wrote:That's not zoomies. That's reactive or bad behavior.
You need more than what you are doing. Much stronger response.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I have the exact same issue with my Golden Retriever who is now almost 2 and shows no signs of stopping. We have tried working with a trainer but, of course, he doesn't do this behavior when the trainer is around.
Things that have helped:
a chain leash - not a fun to grab
causing a diversion - "look a squirrel!"
using a shock collar - he tends to behave much better when we put it on him though sometimes it does not deter him. We almost never actually shock him with it unless he's really bad and even then, he can keep going.
I wish I knew what else to say. Sometimes it's so bad that my kids come home in tears from walking him.
Anonymous wrote:The dog will grow out of it.
Anonymous wrote:Do you mean this happens during a walk? And only during a walk?