Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The dog is well aware that a regular fence is a boundary that is visual and understood. The invisible fence makes for a more aggressive dog because they feel they have to defend it (since other dogs/ people etc) don’t “see” it. Thus you get a lot of barking and defending. Yes it’s very rude. And hard on the dog as well.
That is hilarious. I wish my dog were that kind of genius.
Anonymous wrote:The dog is well aware that a regular fence is a boundary that is visual and understood. The invisible fence makes for a more aggressive dog because they feel they have to defend it (since other dogs/ people etc) don’t “see” it. Thus you get a lot of barking and defending. Yes it’s very rude. And hard on the dog as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not acceptable if the fence is not working and the dog is bounding out. My first instinct would be to let neighbors know that Rover is escaping and that you are worried about Rover's safety--first from traffic and second from people who might haul him off to animal control.
But if your neighbors don't respond, you use video + calls to animal control as needed.
Rover is not escaping. It’s just shocking to people who don’t know Rover will stop at property line but see a big dog running and barking at them.
I grew up in an area with lots of invisible fences but not a lot in the DMV. Interested to hear the responses.
Anonymous wrote:Not acceptable if the fence is not working and the dog is bounding out. My first instinct would be to let neighbors know that Rover is escaping and that you are worried about Rover's safety--first from traffic and second from people who might haul him off to animal control.
But if your neighbors don't respond, you use video + calls to animal control as needed.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think it's acceptable. I have a big goofy lab who thinks every person who walks by wants to pet him and be his friend. He's also 80 pounds. Dog is only allowed in backyard unattended. I'm not worried about him biting or running towards someone else, but completely understand that people who don't know him would have that concern.