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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

dog training

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Dan-IA

05-22-2007 10:21:03




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How do y'all train your dogs not to chase the tractor in the field?

I sure hate worrying about having near-misses and accidents with the family pets, you know.




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Oldmax

05-24-2007 04:58:41




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 Re: dog training in reply to Dan-IA, 05-22-2007 10:21:03  
A wise Man once told me " That you have to be smarter than the dog to train it " that wise Man was my Grandfather.



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B-maniac

05-22-2007 17:56:47




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 Re: dog training in reply to Dan-IA, 05-22-2007 10:21:03  
Most of your farm type dogs have some genes in them from "working" dog pedigrees. These dogs are doing what their breeding tells them to do "WORKING" Whether it's herding , varmint chasing or guarding something , these dogs are not happy unless they are doing it. That's why it don't help when you accidently run over them and they "never learn". They aren't people and they don't learn like people and they don't dissiplin like people. It's not like a child that you can just say what you want and get it. Leave the dog at home out of harms way and when you have time , take him to the field WITHOUT the machinery and let him "work" himself to his heart's content. We kill thousands of dogs every year because of our ignorance and inability to understand and accept the differences between dogs and humans behavior. There are probably thousands who still teach their children about electricity the old school way too. "he dam sure wont stick it in thar 'gin!

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Dave from MN

05-22-2007 14:04:03




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 Re: dog training in reply to Dan-IA, 05-22-2007 10:21:03  
Have used a shock collar withthe old get home command, worked , now I figure they learn if they live through a hit. To many things to keep an eye with having to look for a dog running around, now a kid would be a different story, tractor would stop and he /she would get their hindend chased all the way back to the house.



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city farmer

05-22-2007 13:56:17




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 Re: dog training in reply to Dan-IA, 05-22-2007 10:21:03  
i used a shock collar for many types of dog training mostly labs and blood hounds don't have to be abusive with it can by some nice ones from bass pro shop or cabelows trained a few bloodhounds they are very hardheaded but a shock collar works very well



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ironsales

05-22-2007 12:16:46




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 Re: dog training in reply to Dan-IA, 05-22-2007 10:21:03  
i had a red heeler aka"little bad b" she liked to bite tires, she got a good holt of a farmall h one day the front tire it rolled her and she lost three teeth, still likes to chase tires to this day, shes just a little slower now, haven"t ever been a ble to stop her



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Janicholson

05-22-2007 12:06:17




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 Re: dog training in reply to Dan-IA, 05-22-2007 10:21:03  
Three ideas.
Keep them contained (I know it is not the intended idea)
Have someone assist with training by being on foot and verbal commands to stop. go home, lay down, etc. and be firm (this may take time/effort)
Use dog repellant spray (furniture spray stuff) on a few cloth bags attached to the tractor and implement to make it unpleasant. Tough issue, good luck. JimN



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Paul Simmer

05-22-2007 10:46:50




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 Re: dog training in reply to Dan-IA, 05-22-2007 10:21:03  
Good luck. Many years ago I ran over a mixed breed hound with the left front tire of a Massey Harris 33. He yelped, limped a while, but was right back at it. Even that didn't educate him.



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