IcyIvy Posted May 5, 2020 Share Posted May 5, 2020 Hey guys! I have a 2yr old rescue staffy who is quite excitable, amazing with humans, but horrible with dogs and other animals. My housemate recently brought their pet chickens from their parent's house and we've been working on introducing them through positive reinforcement. Unfortunately, we've hit a plateau and havent seen any improvement in the last two weeks, and she is just drooling to get them. I'd like to get in contact with a trainer that could work with ivy and the chickens, and if positive reinforment continues to show no improvement, would be willing to use an ecollar as a last resort to teach ivy that she can't get to the chickens through the coop fence (yes this has happened twice already). Sidenote: I'm asking specifically about boundary training because I know the use of ecollars is illegal in nsw except for across fence boundaries. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
persephone Posted May 5, 2020 Share Posted May 5, 2020 those 'electronic fences ' (my opinion only ) are fine to stop dogs just wandering around a yard, but I doubt they would stop a dog with a high prey drive .the millisecond zap would be well worth the excitement/reward of chasing/eating chooks . No worse than getting scratched by wire netting, really . I may be wrong - but I have seen some determined dogs ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
juice Posted May 5, 2020 Share Posted May 5, 2020 No idea why your friends would risk bringing livestock to live in a house with a dangerous dog . But anyway , Steve at K9 Pro works with E collars. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Two Best Dogs! Posted May 5, 2020 Share Posted May 5, 2020 (edited) Step 1. Your friend who brought the chickens in needs to invest in a better coop fence - ideally a double fence set up with an enclosed roof. Or you're going to just keep losing the chickens to staffies, foxes, cats, birds of prey etc. Management of environment is the utmost importance and electric fences are frankly pretty useless on worked up dogs. Can you show us a photo of the coop/run set up and we can provide resources on how to improve it? Edited May 5, 2020 by Two Best Dogs! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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