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7/1/2025, 10:02:19 PM
6/19/2025, 8:55:52 PM
>>507992752
>What's /pol/'s opinion on prong collars?
I used a prong collar for a while on a couple bigger dogs I had. One was an american pitbull terrier, the other was a black lab. Both were friendly but would pull so hard on a regular collar that they would start to choke themselves. They were both young, strong males, and didn't care, but they would pull so hard you could hear their breathing start stilting, and then they'd start choking and coughing, but kept pulling regardless.
The prong collar stopped that. The prongs aren't sharp, they're not needles or anything, but they are impossible to pull on with the kind of force my dogs would pull on a regular collar. I could see someone abusing the tool, yanking on the leash or something to hurt the dog, but this is a problem with the person using it, not with the tool itself.
For me, I would stand in one place, let them pull away, and then let them stop pulling as they realized the prongs were uncomfortable, coming back to me.
>What's /pol/'s opinion on prong collars?
I used a prong collar for a while on a couple bigger dogs I had. One was an american pitbull terrier, the other was a black lab. Both were friendly but would pull so hard on a regular collar that they would start to choke themselves. They were both young, strong males, and didn't care, but they would pull so hard you could hear their breathing start stilting, and then they'd start choking and coughing, but kept pulling regardless.
The prong collar stopped that. The prongs aren't sharp, they're not needles or anything, but they are impossible to pull on with the kind of force my dogs would pull on a regular collar. I could see someone abusing the tool, yanking on the leash or something to hurt the dog, but this is a problem with the person using it, not with the tool itself.
For me, I would stand in one place, let them pull away, and then let them stop pulling as they realized the prongs were uncomfortable, coming back to me.
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