Posted by admin | Posted in Pet Supplies | Posted on 20-10-2007
Tags: collar, dog, pet_supplies, shock, training

What training device would you recommend?
My Newf is 3 years old and have tried a lot of training tools, but none of them appears to work.Just to name a few that I tried the Gentle Leader Head Collar, Anti-Pull Harness, pointed collar, shock collar and Chain.Currently Choke has a regular harness and it has given me more control as to be able to hold on to it, but it has really helped traction. What advice training would you recommend?
Ask someone to show you how to use any of the above makes it. They all work, but only if you know how to work with them. Why not teach your dog to walk with a lead to lose? It is impossible to draw and keep the slack in the lead, at the same time.
Electric Collar Dog Training
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Remote Control Dog Training Shock Collar for 2 Dogs with 3 Levels of Shock and Vibration $54.99 You are looking at an Electronic Remote Electric Dog Training Shock Collar for 2 dogs. This remote training shock collar has 3 levels of strong static shock and vibration. You can communicate with 2 dogs via vibration command or use the shock command to individually train your dog. It is an electronic dog training system with a working range up to 600 feet. This compact, easy to operate system wil… |
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No-bark Control Dog Training Shock Collar for medium and large dogs $28.99 You are looking at a New Electroinc No-Bark Dog Training Shock Collar for medium and large stubborn dogs. This unit will make your dog stop barking within days. When your dog barks, the collar applies a high pitch warning tones, if your dog still barks within 30 seconds, the collar applies another 2 high pitch warning tones followed by a shock as your dog’s barking persists. This No-Bark Shock Col… |
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Innotek Automatic and Rechargeable No-Bark Collars A barking dog can be a welcome sound when warning intruders but it can also be annoying at times. These replaceable/rechargeable battery self training collars help your dog learn when barking is unwanted and produce a better, happier pet. System includes a lightweight, water-resistant/waterproof collar unit, batteries/recharger, easy-to-adjust nylon buckle collar, short and long probes for varying… |
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Remote Control Training Collars for 2 Dogs with 3 Levels of Shock $53.99 Brand new dog training collars with one remote control. Can be used to train two small to big dogs at the same time. It is easy to use, great for training your dog(s). FEATURES * One remote control can operate the trainings of two dogs up to 300 meters away. |
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Clinical Practice of Sports Injury Prevention and Care: Olympic Encyclopaedia of Sports Medicine (The Encyclopaedia of Sports Medicine) $106.40 This volume in the Encyclopaedia of Sports Medicine series, the companion volume to Sports Injuries: Basic Principles of Prevention and Care, deals in detail with specific sports injuries and their treatment. The book divides roughly into two parts: Traumatic and Overuse Injuries looks at injuries to each part of the body, with three chapters on knee injuries and a chapter on dermatological proble… |
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TRAINING DAY/FALLEN $9.2 TRAINING DAY: Antoine Fuqua (THE REPLACEMENT KILLERS, BAIT) turns up the intensity level with TRAINING DAY, a charged drama about police corruption in downtown Los Angeles. Ethan Hawke stars as Jake Hoyt, a well-intentioned young officer who thinks he`s found his ticket to becoming a detective in the form of undercover officer Alonzo Harris (Denzel Washington). Harris is a notorious figure in the streets and in the office. He also has the authority to make Jake`s professional wishes come true, provided Jake is able to prove his worth on Alonzo`s team. At first, Alonzo`s blunt, carefree demeanor provides a shock to Jake`s optimistic system, but as it becomes clear that Alonzo is dangerously out of control, Jake must decide whether or not to risk his future in the name of the law.FALLEN: After capturing and prosecuting a brutal serial killer, detective John Hobbes is puzzled by a string of bizarre murders that seem to suggest that the killer is alive–or at least somehow present on Earth. With the help of a beautiful theosophist and his stalwart partner, Hobbes realizes that the killer`s spirit is being transferred between the bodies it possesses–and that it may be impossible to stop him now.FALLEN: |
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Training Day (DVD) $7.46 Antoine Fuqua (THE REPLACEMENT KILLERS, BAIT) turns up the intensity level with TRAINING DAY, a charged drama about police corruption in downtown Los Angeles. Ethan Hawke stars as Jake Hoyt, a well-intentioned young officer who thinks he's found his ticket to becoming a detective in the form of undercover officer Alonzo Harris (Denzel Washington). Harris is a notorious figure in the streets and in the office. He also has the authority to make Jake's professional wishes come true, provided Jake is able to prove his worth on Alonzo's team. At first, Alonzo's blunt, carefree demeanor provides a shock to Jake's optimistic system, but as it becomes clear that Alonzo is dangerously out of control, Jake must decide whether or not to risk his future in the name of the law.Washington's performance as the evil, pragmatic detective is a sight to behold. He delivers his lines with a devilish ferocity that keeps the film bubbling throughout. Hawke slips into the role of the rookie everyman with ease, providing a good contrast to Washington's fiery presence. Former video director Fuqua completes the picture by casting musicians Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre, and Macy Gray in supporting roles.Additional Release Material: Bonus Footage Alternate Ending |
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The Shock Doctrine $10.77 Imposing capitalistic ideals and practices on a population in a post-disaster crisis is an increasingly common occurrence, most vividly demonstrated by events in wartime Iraq. But journalist Naomi Klein (NO LOGO) maintains that this process of "disaster capitalism" has been in place for decades, with roots in the Chicago School and Milton Friedman?s widely influential economic philosophies. Though she doesn`t blame Friedman directly, she makes a compelling case that privileged nations have long made a practice of taking advantage of people who, in literal and metaphorical shock, have regressed to a childlike state and momentarily lose resistance to social control. In highly readable prose, Klein argues reasonably that a free market is not always so free, and that democracy and capitalism do not necessarily arise concomitantly. |
