Hi all,
I need some help with our dog because my husband is very close to sending her to the pound.
We have a 2-year-old Lab/Golden mix, who is kept in a fenced yard. She is excellent at finding new ways to leave the fenced yard: digging under, jumping over (when the snow bank is high enough), running through the gate that the kids left open. We installed an invisible fence around the property which seems to have stopped the digging and the jumping over, and for a time stopped the running through the gate. However, she has found that if she runs fast enough through the gate, she doesn't get shocked or no longer cares if she gets shocked. She is obedient when she is within her boundaries and comes
every time when called, but once she is on the loose she absolutely
will not come when called - we run after her yelling "Come, Kiwi" and she just runs joyously by us or runs circles around us, or lets us approach fairly close only to take off like a shot when we get within touching distance. It takes forever to catch her in these instances.
We are contemplating moving the invisible fence up to the "Stubborn Dog" grade transmitter/collar to try to prevent her from running through the gate, but I still want her to come when I call her no matter what the circumstances. I don't know how to train her to come when called on the loose because when we train in the back yard she comes just fine.
This is rather urgent and I'm afraid to say I need a solution that's going to teach her quickly - for her own safety. She has been taught with positive reinforcement only up to this point. I have been rewarding her handsomely for finally allowing us to catch her after chasing her around the neighborhood. Some people in my entourage feel that by doing so I am reinforcing the running away and not the allowing to be caught, but in 2 years I have lowered the time it takes to catch her from 2 hours to 10 minutes. It's still 10 minutes too long for my liking. At this point I am open to pretty much whatever method will work, for her own good and peace in the family and with the neighbors. She has to come
immediately, not just when she finally feels like it.
Thanks to any dog experts out there who have some suggestions on what to try to 1) get her to come when called when on the loose and 2) stop her from leaving the fenced yard when the gate gets left open accidentally.
Mimi