A lot gets made of which training collar you should choose for your dog. There are plenty to pick from鈥攃hokers, pronged pinch collars, e-collars, slip leads, and regular old flat buckle collars. One way or another they all do the same thing, which is relay information from the handler to the dog. In the course of training Danger, I鈥檝e tried every collar you can imagine and talked to a dozen experts, who each swore by a certain one and dismissed the others as utter nonsense. All of this has brought me to my own conclusion, which I feel equally certain about: Everyone pays far too much attention to the collar. Instead, we need to be thinking about what information the collar is conveying and鈥攎ore importantly鈥攚hether the dog understands what we鈥檙e trying to tell him.
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All you need to know about going wild with man’s best friend.One of the big things that leads to miscommunication is this idea of the collar correction. That鈥檚 when you snap a choker chain or apply an electric shock as a means of letting the dog know he鈥檚 just done something wrong. The problem with collar corrections isn鈥檛 that they鈥檙e inherently mean or dangerous鈥攖hough they certainly can be in novice hands鈥攊t鈥檚 that they miss the opportunity to supply useful information and instead say only one thing: Wrong! If you want to then show the dog the correct behavior, you鈥檝e got to do it as a second step: Wrong. This way. Many dogs will learn new skills like this, but mathematically it鈥檚 more difficult. The number of ways a dog can do any task wrong is nearly infinite. The number of ways to do it right is only one. And since dog training isn鈥檛 a quiz show, it鈥檚 probably a lot easier to tell him the right answer rather than let him guess.
Collar pressure drills are the answer. 鈥檚 founder, Jill Felice, showed me this. She also trains horses, which are too big and powerful to use something like a collar correction on. So, instead, she teaches them that light rein pressure is a directional instruction. Same goes for dogs. Light collar pressure to the left means move left. It鈥檚 really easy to teach, too. Put light pressure on the lead in one direction and reward when the dog moves toward the pressure. This is a good exercise to use a clicker on, as well. Once you鈥檝e got a dog that understands that light collar pressure means move toward the pressure鈥攁nd not, say, pull harder to get out ahead鈥攜ou鈥檒l be able to offer real collar corrections that mean something鈥斺滻 want you over here鈥溾攔ather than the spirit-dampening wrong. The nice thing about teaching your dog the meaning of collar pressure is that you can do it with an ordinary flat collar.
I ended up at this collar pressure exercise because the snap of a choker collar had absolutely no effect on Danger. Ditto the pronged pinch collar. It could be because he鈥檚 a big strong boy with a thick neck, but more likely my novice timing and repeated jerks just hardened him to it. Remember what we learned from Steve White鈥檚 : Punishment is reinforcing to the punisher. In other words, you鈥檝e got to use punishment carefully, because it wears out the more you use it.
The goal in all of this is to have a dog that鈥檚 calm and dependable. And to that end, you don鈥檛 really need a collar. The same way you can teach a dog to move with collar pressure, you can teach him to move with hand signals, touches, or even eye movements. Jill has taught her own dogs that a touch on the top of the head means 鈥淚t鈥檚 your turn鈥濃攁 necessity for things like feeding and coming and going into different holding pens, since she has 13 dogs and can鈥檛 very well be muscling that many animals around all the time.
As a general rule, think about what you鈥檙e telling your dog with whatever method you choose. Most of all, ask yourself whether you鈥檙e supplying the right answer or just shutting your dog down when he gets it wrong.
This article originally appeared on 国产吃瓜黑料 K9, the former dog blog of 国产吃瓜黑料 magazine, on July 22, 2009.