"OmManiPadmeOmelet" > wrote in message
...
> In article >,
> "Doug Kanter" > wrote:
>
>> "OmManiPadmeOmelet" > wrote in message
>> ...
>> > In article >,
>> > "Doug Kanter" > wrote:
>> >
>> >> "SD" > wrote in message
>> >> oups.com...
>> >> >>>
>> >> > All I have to say is "Cookies" and I have 4 dogs diving
>> >> > into crates waiting for cookies and kennel time.
>> >>
>> >> I'll take your word for it. But, until behavior like yours spreads to
>> >> the
>> >> rest of this country, and my neighborhood in particular, this is my
>> >> preferred "cookie". Fortunately for the doggies and their twisted
>> >> owners,
>> >> it's not safe to use this "cookie" he
>> >>
>> >> http://www.springfield-armory.com/pr...-1911-ms.shtml
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>> > You could try training the dogs yourself.......
>> >
>> > Hotwires work wonders and are almost invisible.
>>
>> What are Hotwires?
>>
>>
>
> Electric wires.
>
> Nearly invisible, inexpensive and instantly effective.
> My BC tends to fence chase and she leaps so high, I was afraid she was
> going to accidently go over the fence. She never really tried to, but it
> was a risk we chose not to take.
>
> I strung a double hot wire along the fence line.
>
> Problem solved. ;-)
>
> Some people think they are creul but I don't agree. A dog will hit a
> wire once, _maybe_ twice then will never go near it again.
I wish I could use them, but I have a corner lot. Anything like that would
have to be 8 feet in from the curb to comply with the law. That leaves 8
feet of open territory for the dog criminals and their filthy vermin.