Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a trainer. We have Germans Shepherds so it's critical that they learn not to pull early. It's not a tool we recommend at all. Dogs have been seriously injured by a gentle leader. Use a prong (NOT PINCH) collar for pulling.
The humane society says not to use prong collars and that gentle leaders are a better choice. We've tried martingdale and chain collars and she still pulls.
https://www.humanesociety.org/resources/dog-collars
Anonymous wrote:We’ve used it off an on and now our dog doesn’t need it anymore. No problems with it whatsoever but she did hate it at first - takes getting used to. Try for short walks with treats in the beginning
Anonymous wrote:I'm a trainer. We have Germans Shepherds so it's critical that they learn not to pull early. It's not a tool we recommend at all. Dogs have been seriously injured by a gentle leader. Use a prong (NOT PINCH) collar for pulling.
Anonymous wrote:Our trainer told us that they are terrible and recommended a prong collar and proper training. We use a prong collar, which works great, and our dog is good about heeling when directed to. So in situations where I want him next to me (passing other walkers, etc.) I have him heel, otherwise he walks ahead sniffing around, etc. but doesn’t pull (or rather, pulls SIGNIFICANTLY less).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We used it for a while but it tore up her nose. Hopefully your dog has more hair in her nose than our does. We tried mole skin but it didn’t help.
We eventually stopped because it was creating a raised area on our shepherd’s nose, but it worked okay for several years up until that point.
Anonymous wrote:We used it for a while but it tore up her nose. Hopefully your dog has more hair in her nose than our does. We tried mole skin but it didn’t help.
Anonymous wrote:We used it for a while but it tore up her nose. Hopefully your dog has more hair in her nose than our does. We tried mole skin but it didn’t help.