Remote Training Collar for Small to Large Dogs Effective Positive Reinforcement Training
★★★★★4.95,185 ratings|6K+ sold
$18.99 USD
Quantity
The Prong Dog Choke Collarmakes sure you can enjoy the training time with your dog in the backyard, at the park, at the beach, or anywhere else. It fits well on your pet's neck and doesn't irritate at all. It is a useful, secure, and compassionate method of getting rid of bothersome behaviors like digging, gnawing, biting, and barking.
Features:
Item Type: Training Collars
Material: Stainless steel
Type: Dogs
More About The Product:
Healthy Pet Toys-The welfare and security of pets are our top priorities. All of the toys are constructed of cotton and natural rubber. When teething, dogs want to chew on anything in the house. Therefore, chew toys, pacifiers, and rubber teething rings are all excellent ways to help your dog while they are teething by relieving its itchy teeth.
Interactive To Drive Away Boredom-Dogs love company, help your pet have a toy as its friend. Dogs are animals that need love and accompanied. Our rope toys are suitable for indoor and outdoor activities, such as tug of war, and toss and fetch games. That positively enhances the relationship between you and your dogs. Also, when you are busy, dogs can play with a wide variety of toys alone without feeling lonely.
Easy To Use While Training-A trained dog is what we call an educated dog. Nothing is more powerful than a well-mannered and trained dog. Training your dog has several advantages, some of which will actually save your life.
Frequently Asked Questions
This is a prong/pinch collar, not an electronic remote collar. The title is misleading. There is no remote transmitter included. It functions as a mechanical pressure collar for leash training corrections.
The listing does not specify available sizes or neck circumference range. Based on the prong collar design description, contact the seller to confirm the fixed size before purchasing, especially for very small (under 20cm neck) or very large (over 55cm neck) dogs.
Most professional trainers advise against prong collars on puppies under 6 months as their tracheas and neck muscles are still developing. Wait until the puppy reaches at least 6 months and has basic leash manners before introducing a prong collar, ideally under trainer guidance.
The stainless steel reference applies to the prong links themselves. The cotton and rubber language appears to be copy-paste error from a generic template. Treat the stainless steel description as accurate for this collar.
Prong collars can be worn by trained dogs for maintenance of leash manners, but many trainers transition trained dogs to flat collars or harnesses. For a dog with solid leash training, a prong collar may be unnecessary; use it as a training tool, not permanent equipment.
A correctly fitted prong collar should sit just behind the ears at the top of the neck, snug enough that you cannot pull it down over the head but not so tight that it pinches at rest. Typically you should be able to insert two fingers between the collar and neck when the dog is relaxed.