- @mintu1
I normally don't like pugs, but Chibi is super cute !!!
So happy someone takes good care of their pug !!
Have you thought of getting surgery to open up his airways a bit ;o ??
He seems active ! But it would help even more probably !
Luzien wrote:@Naeco wrote:Anyone ever try bikejoring with their dog/s? And not like run alongside the bike, actually pulling. Skai absolutely loves it. I tried it before the snow and she is amazing besides the fact that when she sees dogs she needs to say hi. Any tips for that?
I would be on the bike, by myself, so I cannot correct her or treat her. I always have a line hooked to her collar so I was thinking maybe verbal correction then prong correction? It worked when I trained her to walk properly.
first of...bikjoring is not simply pulling....you have to do most of the work, the dog will only help
--> how old is the dog? and is he cleared healthy enough by your vet for this![]()
then, never ever use a collar (and never ever a prong....it is not right...or do you want to kill the dog?) but the right bikjoring-skijoring harness and leash and bikeattachment.with Flex part in leash
..
also...you Need to Train dog from the ground till they walk-stop-turn on your given comand without stop...asap.
no ever saying hi to other Dogs People or to pee, only when you say so!!!!! and you Need to let the dog stop now and then, to go potty or take a breath for some mins...the health of the dog goes over everything..
Train first Walking at you side till they turn left when you say left or right when you say right...or whistle or so...then let the dog walk in front of you and Train again, go over to running Walking ...when this works let them walk at you bike, next to you then in front of you and the bike and go over to driving the bike from slow to working travel trotting...they trot not go full run...the dog and you need to find the right a working gait on the bike for long runs you do in bikjoring, not the short fast run some do with there dog on the leash running full Speed...you can an most often will hurt the dog or work it in the ground...
so go slow, train up to the point you want to go...so no 30min run a first day, when dog is not fit and trained, start with 5min...
with slow every day training but one day where they have free day, each week...you will get the dog to work well and not pull to the side or stop...they sometimes will react bether than you with time,.....it can kill you and your dog or hurt you badly when you do something wrong....
i can look if i find the site with easy training and what harness and shockabsorbing long pulling leash to use....and such
방탄소년단 wrote:
x
@naeco i've never tried it! though i've always thought that it looks fun, so maybe one day.
are you mainly using a harness made for joring & have a different line attached to a collar as well or? if you don't have one, i'd recommend it. it's safer not to use a collar for any type of joring, because they're pulling your entire weight + a bike, which will put strain on their neck, and they'll quickly injure themselves. a harness made for it allows her to use her entire body weight for pulling, instead of her neck, and she'll be more comfy + safe.
you can find lots online! like this or this
it's definitely best to leave out the prong while you're on a bike, because accidents can happen, and obviously it's good to try and keep as safe as possible. the only tip i really have would be strengthening/working on leave it.
@lmarani i'm really sorry. :c
halogen. wrote:Brachycephalic doesn't mean the dog can't exercise and be fit just as much as any other breeds.
Carol Beuchat PhD wrote:...Internally, the tissues that normally occupy the muzzle are compressed into much less space at the front of the skull. This compresses the complex network of nasal turbinates and the tissues of the upper airway. The anatomical rearrangement of the skull also increases the risk of Chiri-like malformation and syringomyelia, impairs thermoregulation, and even alters the structural organization of the brain (Knowler et al 2014; Packer et al 2015; Roberts et al 2010). The consequences to the dog can be significant pain, exercise intolerance, laryngeal collapse, difficulty breathing, snoring, heat stroke, and even death...
fixation wrote:@ferncat
your dog is so cute!!! what a precious and sweet face, and aaa those ears! give him belly rubs for me ❤
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