Anonymous wrote: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.
Wrong. OP said he occasionally runs right through. There is a dog like this in my neighborhood and it drives me freaking crazy! And even when he isn’t running through he is barking like mad at everyone who walks by. Their house is near a walking trail and I have seen this dog out loose on the trail 4 times! Ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had one and I hated it. I got it because my DH refused a real fence and it was about 1/3 of the cost of a real one. For many of the reasons mentioned it was not a good thing. If my dog escaped, which he did probably 3 times in 5 years, it I'd hate the zap he got and the fact he was in the road (no sidewalk) and I really hated the people who'd just stroll onto our lawn with their own dogs, without asking first if it was ok. Sometimes it worked out and sometimes it did not, depending on whether the dogs got along or not.
Odd. We love ours. And we have a golf course view so HOA says no fences. works great for us and we have a large golden retriever.
Not odd. Your experience is not the universal experience, not the "norm". Everyone's take is different. That's a basic life lesson for you, right there.
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I don't need a life lesson from you. I know the fence works for me and all of my neighbors with dogs. What is YOUR problem?
Anonymous wrote:Dogs absolutely run through invisible fences. Many dogs figure out that if they run through quickly, the shock is brief and then stops. We have a neighbor whose dog has run through their “fence” and attacked our dogs more than once. The dog is a large golden retriever and the owner says we’re overreacting and insists that the dog is “harmless.”
I love dogs and have owned a golden retriever, and I am willing to believe that dog probably wouldn’t hurt a human. However, it could easily kill my 7 pound cavapoo. Last time, luckily, when it went for the neck, it grabbed my dog’s collar and my dog slipped out of the collar and ran home while my bigger dog jumped in to defend the little one. My DH ended up in the middle of a dog fight. I am absolutely calling animal control next time.
Anonymous wrote:How about if they leave the dog out front with the invisible fence and go to work all day?
Anonymous wrote:I would call animal control when the dog barks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had one and I hated it. I got it because my DH refused a real fence and it was about 1/3 of the cost of a real one. For many of the reasons mentioned it was not a good thing. If my dog escaped, which he did probably 3 times in 5 years, it I'd hate the zap he got and the fact he was in the road (no sidewalk) and I really hated the people who'd just stroll onto our lawn with their own dogs, without asking first if it was ok. Sometimes it worked out and sometimes it did not, depending on whether the dogs got along or not.
Odd. We love ours. And we have a golf course view so HOA says no fences. works great for us and we have a large golden retriever.
Not odd. Your experience is not the universal experience, not the "norm". Everyone's take is different. That's a basic life lesson for you, right there.
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I don't need a life lesson from you. I know the fence works for me and all of my neighbors with dogs. What is YOUR problem?
My problem is that you rudely dismissed my response with the idea that it was "odd" when in fact it was simply a different experience to yours. You have social issues if a) you don't understand that and b) you get angry when its pointed out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had one and I hated it. I got it because my DH refused a real fence and it was about 1/3 of the cost of a real one. For many of the reasons mentioned it was not a good thing. If my dog escaped, which he did probably 3 times in 5 years, it I'd hate the zap he got and the fact he was in the road (no sidewalk) and I really hated the people who'd just stroll onto our lawn with their own dogs, without asking first if it was ok. Sometimes it worked out and sometimes it did not, depending on whether the dogs got along or not.
Odd. We love ours. And we have a golf course view so HOA says no fences. works great for us and we have a large golden retriever.
Not odd. Your experience is not the universal experience, not the "norm". Everyone's take is different. That's a basic life lesson for you, right there.
;
I don't need a life lesson from you. I know the fence works for me and all of my neighbors with dogs. What is YOUR problem?