Dog Vibration Free Interrelated Resource

by on May 21, 2010

dog-training-obedience Dog Vibration Free Interrelated Resource

If you are looking to find Dog Vibration online, then check these links out:


Help answer the question about Dog Vibration
Why is my dog shaking?
My fox terrier (male 8 yrs old 17 pounds) for the past 3 days has been shaking, Dog Vibration not violently it's more like a cell phone vibration. It is cold where I live about 40 degrees a day, but my house is heated and there is no foaming of the mouth or anything like that. Should I be concerned?
remote-control-dog-training-shock-vibrate-collar-system
100lv-shock+vibra-remote-electric-dog-training-collar-
remote-control-dog-training-shock-vibrate-collar-system
remote-control-dog-training-shock-vibrate-collar-system
gt1-remote-gentle-trainer-1-dog-vibration-e-collar
gt-3-unleashed-technology-gentle-2-dog-remote-trainer-
vibration-6-level-strong-static-impulse-collar-two-dog
gt-3-unleashed-technology-gentle-dog-remote-trainer-
100lv-shock+vibra-remote-electric-2-dog-training-collar
lcd-remote-two-dog-training-collar-anti-bark-100-levels
remote-dog-training-collar-anti-bark -obedience-trainer
remote-control-dog-training-shock-vibrate-collar-system
lcd-100-levels-300-meters-remote-dog-training+2x-collar
lcd-display-remote-2-dog-training-collar-100-levels-new
lcd-100-levels-300-meters-remote-dog-training+2x-collar
vibration-6-level-strong-static-impulse-collar-two-dog
4-in-1-remote-dog-pet-training-collar-shock-1km-1000m-!
lcd-remote-100-lv-shock-&-vibration-dog-training-collar
vibration-6-level-strong-static-impulse-collar-two-dog
gt1-remote-gentle-training-deaf-dog-vibration-e-collar
remote-electronic-dog-training-e-collar-static-shock
300m-remote-dog-lcd-two-training-collar-100levels-shock
100-levels-remote-dog-training-shock-collar-for-2-dogs
100lv-shock+vibra-remote-electric-dog-training-collar
vibration-6-level-strong-static-impulse-collar-two-dog
vibration-6-level-strong-static-impulse-collar-two-dog
gt2-remote-gentle-training-dog-vibration-shock-e-collar
hot!-1000m-remote-control-no-bark-4in1-dog-train-collar
remote-dog-training-100-lev-collar-static-shock-control
lcd-display-remote-dog-training-shock-collar-100-levels
remote-shock-vibrate-small-medium-dog-training-collar
remote-control-dog-training-shock-vibrate-collar-system
remote-control-dog-training-shock-vibrate-collar-system
vibration-6-level-strong-static-impulse-collar-two-dog
lcd+shock+vibra-remote-electric-training-collar-2-dog
remote-control-dog-training-shock-vibrate-collar-system
gt1-remote-gentle-trainer-deaf-dog-vibration-e-collar
gt3-remote-gentle-trainer-1-dog-vibration-e-collar
4-in-1-remote-dog-pet-training-collar-shock-1km-1000m-!
gt2-remote-gentle-trainer-1-dog-vibration-e-collar
gt3-remote-gentle-training-dog-vibration-shock-e-collar

dog-training-obedience Dog Vibration Free Interrelated Resource

{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

Your Highness May 21, 2010 at 8:44 pm

Maybe find something you can throw in front of her from a distance? Something that won’t hurt her if it accidently hits her…like ball of paper? or…maybe get a nerf gun or something, that’ll shoot further. Haha, I really have no idea if that would work. If my dog were deaf, that’d be one thing i’d try though.

Senior Airman Gregory C May 22, 2010 at 8:38 am

I think they think you are howling so they are joining in.

Maxi May 22, 2010 at 9:21 pm

I train deaf dogs and you certainly don’t need a vibrating collar to do that.As for shock collars these were invented by idiots who know nothing about dog behaviour, cause and affect and wanted quick results so they could charge people a fortune and pretend they are ‘top dog trainers’ and unfortunately these collars are available now to the public who know even less. You don’t have to shock dogs into obeying commands and the only people who use them are complete and utter idiots unfortunately it’s the dogs that suffer, often becoming anxious and fearful, with that fear being displayed in other behaviours, some of which is acceptable to humans so it is ignored. A deaf dog is taught on a lead ALWAYS.As for the dog having too much energy to be on a lead…………why has it got too much energy? Questions:What food is it being fed?What exercise is it getting?What is it’s temperament?All of these questions need to be answered first and dealt with as they can all cause ‘too much excitement’ before you even THINK about let alone start any training.Excited energy in the dog world is negative, weak energy, the result of anxiety………that needs addressing.It sounds as if you are trying to be kind in helping someone else, however have little knowledge or experience about dogs, sorry however you are going to do more damage to the dog rather than help.Additional: I would say then the food needs looking at, if feeding kibble then the first ingredient needs to be a NAMED meat, any cereal content also needs to be named oats, brown rice ( No wheat, maize corn) and if there are lots of unpronounceable additives these are often cheap fillers along with cereals. A dog on a good diet will reduce it’s excited behaviour within a week. Excitement is weak/anxious energy. If ‘working off lead’ have light weight long lead on let it trail that way you can step on it ‘stroke’ the lead to get attention.For deaf dogs, treat as puppies, training for no more than 10 minutes before a break and play, this allows them to absorb the things they have learned, always on lead, try ‘stroking’ the lead towards you to get attention, point to your eye using a high value treat to teach eye contact hold the look give treat (remember eye contact is aggressive in dog language)Two items I use are a ‘my toy’ and Primula squeezy cheese ( tube of soft cheese found in supermarkets chiller cabinets) these are great as you only give the dog a lick…dogs brains work, if i don’t get paid (treat) I will work harder to get it unlike people who if they don’t get paid they don’t go to work. My toy is a dog toy I buy for myself ( rope ball)play with the dog etc then when finished put it in your pocket the dog NEVER gets it to play on its own….everytime it comes out it means fun, great recalls and you can swing it about to get attention as dogs have peripheral vision they see it.Espeically for ‘Greek God AKA Greekman’ “If your lifeguard duties were as good as your ignorant insults, a lot of people would be drowning.”’MyDogRules’ I like your guts at having a go….but don’t stress about people who are not prepared to change with the times their methods are outdated, ignorant & uneducated….a man on a mission, they have to believe in themselves or no one else will!

Lilllyyy '<3 x. May 23, 2010 at 9:19 am

My dog is scared of vacuum cleaners, dog bowls, broomsticks, looking people in the eyes, toys, the dishwasher, and pretty much everything. She shakes madly. I think dogs are scared of unknown objects… each dog is different and maybe your phone vibrating sounds like something that left your dog with bad experiences. It could be anything, really. Maybe he/she just doesn’t like the sound of it.

L.N. May 23, 2010 at 8:34 pm

Perhaps a Plaster Bagworm? Related to the Clothes Moth but does not attach its cocoon to objects and the caterpillar drags it along behind it.http://www.pestmanagement.ca/Questions/What%20i3375.jpg

mauveme49 May 24, 2010 at 8:41 am

I have never heard of this before but I think it is fantastic. I have finally actually learned something very useful on here. Thanks, I have a couple of friends with deaf dogs and will pass on the info. They are just young too so it will be a great benifit.

Nikole S May 24, 2010 at 9:18 pm

Deaf dogs can make great pets. They adapt to their hearing loss quite well because a dog’s primary sources of communication are through body language and scent. You might notice that when two dogs greet each other, they communicate all kinds of signals to each other without using any sound.http://dogtime.com/train-deaf-faq-lokhandwala.html

woodtick314 May 25, 2010 at 9:14 am

Go with the shock collar. Most have an adjustable level of correction. You can set it so low that the dog will not get zapped, but just a very mild “attention getter”. The one I have also has a boost switch, which raises the stimulation 2 levels in the event that the dog does not respond to the first signal. It has worked wonders on my Husky. Hope this helps.

momma1 May 25, 2010 at 8:53 pm

Is she eating well, drinking plenty of water, going to the potty, having normal bowl movements if all this is normal than take her temperature. normal will be 101, if it’s above that or way below it go to the vet.At eight years old you might want to consider she may be loosing her vision or hearing. this would stress out a normally active doge. Take her to her vet and have her checked out.Good luck

Shefi M May 26, 2010 at 9:15 am

Don’t try to keep him off your bed. I don’t like my dog getting on my clean sheets cause he is always dirty…instead, get another sheet and cover you whole bed with it. That way he sheds on the sheet, not your bed, when your ready to sleep remove the cover sheet. Then put it back on in the morning.

Another Planet May 26, 2010 at 9:08 pm

Dogs howl because the sound carries further than barking. They want the sound to carry so they can call family members back home. YOU that is! I would think that your dog starts at the same time everyday because it is disturbed by some kind of noise at that time. A car starting up, another dog barking, getting light, neighbours leaving for work or anything like that. I would make sure that the dog will be in total darkness when it is getting light & leave a radio on to drown out any sounds your dog may hear.

Zuri May 27, 2010 at 9:00 am

B The object isn’t vibrating in a range for humans to hear.dogs have a wider range of hearing than humans.

Forsaken May 27, 2010 at 8:39 pm

I refuse to use them. Try classical conditioning, operant conditioning and speaking to a behaviorist. You can actually make the behavior worse if you aren’t careful. If worse comes to worse use a citronella spray collar. They work on the same principle but do no harm to the dog.

Previous post:

Next post:

</