Showing posts with label Halti collar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halti collar. Show all posts

Monday, May 21, 2007

It Seems to Be Working . . .

This past Thursday went to my local PetsMart and traded in the size 2 Halti collar for a size 1. I was pleasantly surprised that they took the larger one back, since Llewellyn had been slobbering over it for the past week.

But then, that's why I had to take it back-- it was too easy for him to get it into his mouth and then off entirely.

So for the past four days we've been trying the smaller one.

And it worries me. He can breathe all right in it, he can eat his dinner wearing it, he can walk for blocks at a good pace in it, he can wear it around the house for an hour or two with no sign of discomfort or distress. But gosh, it looks so small on him! Don't those things come in half sizes?

I suppose I should be glad and leave well enough alone. After all, it's doing its job keeping him from going ballistic when he sees or hears another dog on the street. That's what I want, isn't it?

Yes, but I don't want to hurt him getting it, either.

Well, we have our private lesson later today with the dog training. I'll see what she says.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Two Steps Forward, One Step Back


Early this evening Llewellyn and I walked out to take the air, he wearing his training collar.

He behaved very nicely. We went down the far end of the block, then across the street to visit with an elderly gentleman sitting on his porch. Llewellyn let the nice man pet him and tell him what a good doggie he was, and he did not pull into the open door of the house to try to find the cats he scented. He didn't try to race across the yard to tree the squirrel that cheekily crossed the street just to tease him.

We took our leave and went down to the park above the river. All was well.

But down the river road, on the other side, I could see a couple with a wee little Yorkie with them. Ah. This will show how well the Halti collar works when Llewellyn spies other dogs.

So we walked that way, still on the other side of the street.

And the answer to the burning question is . . . at this juncture, not very well. Barking and jumping in his wrath, he pawed at the collar till the muzzle strap was in his mouth. Soon, he had the muzzle strap off altogether. The Yorkie didn't say a thing, surprisingly. And his people just stood there across the street, exchanging pleasantries about dog training, while I'm thinking, "Go! go! Don't you see my dog won't calm down till you've got yours out of sight?"

But I didn't, because I have my silly pride and I don't want Llewellyn getting a reputation around the neighborhood as a mean or out-of-control dog.

After a bit they did go, and we went round the other side of the block and took a longer way home, even though it looked like rain.

I do have to give him credit. Even when he was barking and jumping, he let me put the muzzle strap back on him. I got it on without undoing the neck strap, which says "loose" to me. Maybe I need to get him the next smaller size? His muzzle's so narrow, he slides out of this one too easily.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

More Progress

I ventured outside with Llewellyn in his Halti collar late this evening.

Out in the backyard first, then through the gate and down the path to the front sidewalk. We walked up to the corner, then back past our house, and then back to the corner and home again. (Treats! treats!)

And it was miraculous. No jumping, no lunging, no crushed fingers or dislocated shoulders.

Tomorrow I'll try it in the daylight. We'll see how he does with distractions.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Rhadwen Takes Advantage

Being a cat, Wennie has an eye to the main chance. She knows when something is up, and if she can get in on the bargain, she drives it home with all her might. That is, if she feels like it.

In this case, she knows Llewellyn is being trained. She knows he doesn't get his breakfast or his dinner unless he sits and stays while I go across the room and fill up his bowl. I have to set the bowl down on the table to put the lid back on the dog food tin. And that's where Rhadwen siezes her advantage.

Up she jumps on the table, and she's got her face in the dog's dish, chomping away, before I can get the lid centered on the can.

(Now, Llewellyn does get his turn at this game. Rhadwen gets fed on top of a bookcase, to keep the dog out of her food. And he's figured out how to tease her so badly that she knocks the dish onto the floor. Pieces of kibble go flying, and guess who gets the most of it?

(And what the dog doesn't gobble up goes down the register.)

But now Wennie has found a new way to get her own back. Tonight I tried leading Llewellyn around the house with his leash attached to his Halti collar, around and around from kitchen to hall to front room to living room to dining room to kitchen and around again. Rhadwen figured out that if she sat on a certain dining room chair, she was in the perfect position to whap him with her claws every time he came around. She obviously knew he was under restraint and couldn't hit back!

If you're wondering why I didn't stop this feline agression, it's because Llewellyn never seemed to feel it. I wonder if that's because his coat is so thick. Or was Rhadwen only playing, and thought he should know what she could do if she really wanted to?

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Making Progress

Here's Llewellyn wearing his new training collar. He's still not thrilled with it, but at least he kept it on for about ten minutes without excessive histrionics. For awhile he even forgot he was wearing it-- when his sister Rhadwen was kakking a hairball and most of her breakfast on the mantlepiece. "Kin I have some a' dat? Smells gooood! "

Using the dry Three Dog Bakery training treats instead of the smoked sausage kept the excitement level down a notch. He loves them, indeed he does; he scarfs them down whole. But the aroma isn't quite so mesmerizingly distracting.

Maybe before tomorrow's sessions I'll actually review the instructions that came with the Halti collar, and we'll make even more progress. Day after I bought the thing, already I'd forgotten where in the house they were. Turned out, they were in the package the collar came in. Where they belonged. Right where I'd put them. Of course!

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Early Days Yet

My dog Llewellyn is very strange. He can't or won't walk on a leash worth a darn. But every time I open the drawer in the little stand by the front door, the one with his leash in it, he leaps and whirls like a small tornado. "We get to go out?! O bliss! O ecstasy! We're going out!"

I find now that it's much the same with his new Halti collar. I get it out to train him on it, and you'd think he was being invited to the canine version of Disney World.

But put it on him? He's pawing, mouthing, doing everything he can to get it off. "I don' wan' this thing on me!! Take it off! Now!"

The dog trainer said only leave it on him a minute or so in the early stages, so that's what I'm doing. But as soon I take it off and he can see it in my hand again, there he goes jumping and dancing, doggie mouth grinning with glee, Mr. Excitement thinking it means something Wonderful is about to happen.

Maybe it's the pieces of smoked sausage I'm using to reward him for trying the new collar. Maybe they inspire just a bit too much rapture.

We'll keep on working on it. He needs to get used to that collar. There's no reason why he shouldn't-- After all, it's early days yet.