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Species group: Mixed Breeds
I never recommend inflatable collars.Inflatable collars are not effective at preventing dogs from licking their incision sites. The only time I have ever used these is to put them on in addition to a hard e-collar to keep it pushed forward. I never recommend inflatable collars as a standalone preventative..
From Rachel_Muur_DVM 214 days ago
Positive Reinforcement only went so far with our mixed breed dogOur mixed breed mutt had been kept in a garage for six months and had not been trained nor socialized in any way when we got him. He was very wild, untamed and impulsive, and teaching him anything at all was quite a challenge.When using positive reinforcement on our dog, it would work for some of his behavioral issues some of the time. but never all the time. We tried giving him extra attention and/or treats as positive reinforcement techniques.He would urinate on the floor constantly and would even urinate on us sometimes whenever he would turn over on his back and we would rub his belly. We weren't sure if it was a bladder problem, a nervous problem, or if he just didn't care, but no matter what we did, we couldn't stop him from urinating whenever and wherever he pleased--especially when he would get excited. And positive reinforcement never worked on him for house training purposes.It worked sometimes for: jumping, not coming when called, socializing with humans, whining, digging and destructive chewingIt almost never worked for heeling and play biting.Again, this is just based on a mixed breed dog who had no kind of training for the first 4 to 6 months of his life. Pure breed and/or other more domesticated mixed breed dogs would likely be more receptive to positive reinforcement techniques..
From tlsallie 243 days ago
No thanks