I’m not going to sugarcoat any of this. You should consider using a shock collar to train your dog only if you’ve reachedÌýthe limits of positive reinforcement, and even thenÌýonly after enlisting the help and expertise of a professional trainer or veterinarian. ButÌýif your dog has a persistent behavior that is limiting its ability to leadÌýa happy, full life, then you may find that a shock collar can help.
My wife and I adopted Teddy a year and a half ago from a little rescue organization in northeast Montana. She was five months old and had lived a hard life. The rescuer thought she was a Great Pyrenees-German shepherd mix. It took us a solid year of consistency, patience, and unconditional love to get her to feel comfortable in our family. Watching all that hard work pay off as Teddy blossomed into the sweetest dog we’ve ever ownedÌýwas totally worth it.
ButÌýit turns out that Teddy is not a Great Pyrenees mix.ÌýShe’s a purebred . Anatolians are a livestock guardian breed that originated in TurkeyÌýand are known for their athleticismÌýand fiercely protective, loving nature. There’s —well, famous amongÌýAnatolian enthusiasts—of a sheep licking the wounds of one that’s covered in bloodÌýafter defending its herd from a pack of wolves. Teddy’s not the worst dog to end up owning in a part of the world known for its large predators. ButÌýthere’s probably one thing you’d want to know about an Anatolian before adopting one: they are to barking what an Arabian Stallion is to running.
I think it was about the time that the mayor of our little town threatened to call the cops on us that we realized we had a problem. That was about a year ago, and we’ve since invested a lot of time in trying to redirect Teddy’s attention to other, more positive things when sheÌýstarts barking. And that worked; there’s a noticeable difference in how oftenÌýand how persistent Teddy will bark now.ÌýCompared to last year, it’s dropped probably 20 percent.
But while reducing an Anatolian shepherd’s barking by 20 percent may be a huge accomplishment from an owner’s perspective, the result is still a lot of barking. And that threatened to derail our ability to include Teddy in our life. For our wedding, we went to great lengths to find a dog-friendly location andÌýthen planned a 5,000-mile drive there and back, staying in dog-friendly hotels and camping along the way so we could bring all threeÌýdogs along. At hotels, we’re obviously careful to never leave the dogs unattended in the room, but we still feared we’d be bad guests if Teddy made too much noise. To bring her along, we had to find a way to not just reduce but totally stop her barking, at least for a night or two at a time.
While we were trying to figure that out, our friend TyÌýflew in to visit for the weekend. It was winter, so a lot of the far-flung hiking trails weren’t accessible, but I still wanted to show Ty a part of Montana he’d never seen. We ended up taking the dogs to a trail I’d never hiked before. It was overcrowded, and it did not go well.
Teddy used to ignore other dogs on hikes, but as she’s grown in confidence, she’s also started to realize that she can make friends outside of our immediate family. That happened slowly, first with human houseguests, and then with dogs we’d meet at the dog park. ButÌýeven as she’s learned about the possibility of friends, Teddy hasn’t necessarily learned about dog politics. Not every dog is friendly, not every dog wants to play, and not every dog or dog owner understands that a fierce-looking, intently focused, 115-pound Anatolian shepherd bounding up to them at full speed is really just excited to lick them on the face.
The Best Dog Training Collar and System
Ty watched at least five different people scream at me on that hike andÌýthen told me to get a shock collar. HeÌýhad to invest in one a few years ago after wildlife officers almost shotÌýhis Karelian bear dogÌýwhen Sansho chased a baby bighorn sheep up a cliffÌýand was closing in for a kill. I told Ty I was afraid of ruining Teddy’s sweet demeanor with harsh correction techniques, but he was insistent that the outright need to use the collar was very infrequent, because it delivered training results almost immediately. He bent my ear about it the entire way home, so I bought aÌý.
The Sport Pro includes a collar-mounted training device withÌýautomatic bark-correction capabilityÌýand a handheld controller with a 3/4-mile range. In automatic mode, the collar detects barkingÌýand will initially warn the dog with a vibration before starting at the lowest shock level, then progressing upwardÌýif the barking continues or intensifies. The handheld controller allows you to apply that correction manually, giving you both vibration and beep cues, as well as ten selectable levels of shock to choose from. It can control up to three collars, and the batteries in both the collar and handheld last up to 60 hours.
Will Using a Shock Collar Cause Your Dog Pain?
I tried it on myself first: in the lower settings, it starts as an unpleasant tingle before ramping up into something that causes a muscle spasm in the highest setting. I was holding the shock collar in my hand, and at that highest level, the shock spasmed my entire forearm and hand, causing me to drop the device involuntarily. It’s certainly not a pleasant feeling, but it’s momentary and not so much painful as it is intense.
Still, it’s not an experience I want to give to my dogs more often than necessary. Fortunately, it does appear that Ty was right: you don’t need to use it much at all.
Training and Barking
After a couple days of trial and error figuring out where the device’s prongs needed to be located on Teddy’s throat to detect barksÌýand how tight the collar needed to beÌýfor those prongs to penetrate her thick coat, I got to watch the automatic bark correction in action. During an evening walk, Teddy barked loudly at a passing dog on the other side of the street, then immediately let out a short whimper. She barked again, whimpered again, then made it through the rest of the walk with no further sound. It didn’t otherwise alter her behavior at all; she displayed no fear, wasn’t any less curious about smells or sounds, and acted like the same vibrant, happy dog we love. She’dÌýjust stopped barking.
Importantly, the collar does not seem to have discouraged Teddy from barking in circumstances that genuinely merit it. We don’t want to deny herÌýnature, nor do we want to stop her from being a good guard dog. Even though it has curbed her overall instinct to bark—even when she’s not wearing the collar—she will still enthusiastically roar at anything she perceives as a threat. We’ve never been safer from the cottontail that lives under our deck.
Hiking and Other Dogs
I also wanted to use the device to stop her from focusing on other dogs so much while hiking. If I called her off, I needed her to listen. So, on hikes where other people were present, I started by keeping her on the leash. If we passed another dog and Teddy focused on it too much, I’d call her to try to refocus her attention on me.ÌýIf she didn’t comply, I’d shock her at level four (of ten), which is her threshold for responding to the stimulus. On a leashed hike where I called her, she didn’t respond, and I shocked her;Ìýshe listenedÌýthe rest of the time, with otherwise unaltered behavior.
Garmin instructs users of the Sport Pro to determine their dog’s sensitivity to the shock with an initial trial. Fit the collar correctlyÌýand begin applying brief shocks starting at level one, then workÌýyour way up until it elicits a response from the dog. Teddy’s response is to whimper; there’s no flinching or cowering. Once you find that level, there’s never any need to apply a stronger shock; you’ve found your dog’s training threshold. The point at which your dog responds to the stimulus is all it needs to learn from it. Testing level four on myself feels like only a moderate tingle.
After those first on-leash hikes with the training device, I’ve begun to allow Teddy off-leash againÌýwhile wearing the collar. If she spots another dogÌýand runs towardÌýit without listening to me call her off, I’ll shock her. She never fails to respond to thatÌýbut hasn’t yet progressed to the point where the issue is totally cured off-leash in absence of the shocks. It’s a big improvement regardlessÌýand something I have no doubt will prove effective with more time and consistency.
Why Using a Shock Collar Worked for Us
Is this cruel? I’d instead call it effective. Training with the shock collar, even for a very brief time, ensured that we were able to successfully bring Teddy along on that monthlong trip to southern Baja and back. She didn’t bark in a hotel room once, and all the rest of our positive-reinforcement training meant that she was reliable in all her other behaviors. Even off-leashÌýaround other guestsÌýat a fancy hotel.
We didn’t get to that remarkable level of reliability through shock training alone, of course, but rather trough a never-ending program of positive reinforcementÌýand deliberate, scaled socialization. I employÌýthe shock collar only for the two behaviors described hereÌýand ultimately have toÌýapply remarkably few shocks. Right now, as we continue to work on Teddy’s focus towardÌýother dogs, I’d say I’m shocking her maybe once every two weeks. And simply wearing the collar is enough to entirely prevent her from barking.ÌýTeddy hasÌýlearned that she shouldn’t bark when it’s on, so she isn’t receiving corrections in that circumstance, either.
Even if Teddy experiences pain from the shocks in a way that testing the collar on myself did not reveal—an unlikely but worst-case scenario that is worth considering—then the return on those very few momentary instances of pain has still been enormous. She’s living a happier, more fulfilled lifeÌýwhere she’s included and trusted throughout our travel and experiences. Heck, she got to live at that fancy hotel for ten days, off-leash, being fed and pampered by her new best friends: the hotel staff. And who knows? Maybe our mayor will even stop threatening to callÌýthe cops on her.
Is a Shock Collar Right for Your Dog?
That’s a decision I’d encourage you to make carefullyÌýwith the help of a professional trainer. AndÌýif you do decide to use one, make sure you identify the express circumstances in which its use can fit into your overall training program. That program should still be built around positive reinforcement, even if a shock collar may help you resolve a specific, particularly challengingÌýand important problem.