Awww Sophie! Little Miss Helper! XoxoI have her little black doppelganger lying across my lap right now, with his big brother on my feet. DOL. Aintnothing getting done this morning hecause I have a bad case of DOL! (dogs on lap) :)
We had an escape artist dog one time. I put up one of those invisible fences, a wire run around the inside perimeter of our privacy fence, and put the collars on the dogs. At some point, my the 12-y-o son messed with the controller, which could be adjusted to create a wider or narrower barrier at the fence. He left it turned all of the way up. Now, in order to allow the dogs to get in and out of the house, I had run the wire at the eaves, and adjusted the controller so the trigger to beep (the second stage, when they got closer, was a mild shock) was about 18 inches over the tallest dogs head. Where he left it set, the trigger to shock was 3 feet inside the back door. It took almost a month to retrain one of our dogs that it was OK to go outside. I also told my son that if he ever touched the controller again, I was going to put the collar on HIM, and put the loop around his door. This was after I showed him what the shock felt like. Still pisses me off, lol.
Ahem! As I’ve been saying, since our sweet Annie (Fat-Bottomed Girl) got stuck in the doggie door (thanks for that, Dad), gotta grease that little sweetie or fix the door, Dad!
Gary Fabian about 5 years ago
I’d suggest peanut butter. It sticks better and is greasier.
Ida No about 5 years ago
It’s Thanksgiving. Surely there’s enough real grease to go around for everyone.
Pet about 5 years ago
Awww Sophie! Little Miss Helper! XoxoI have her little black doppelganger lying across my lap right now, with his big brother on my feet. DOL. Aintnothing getting done this morning hecause I have a bad case of DOL! (dogs on lap) :)
Kirk Barnes Premium Member about 5 years ago
We had an escape artist dog one time. I put up one of those invisible fences, a wire run around the inside perimeter of our privacy fence, and put the collars on the dogs. At some point, my the 12-y-o son messed with the controller, which could be adjusted to create a wider or narrower barrier at the fence. He left it turned all of the way up. Now, in order to allow the dogs to get in and out of the house, I had run the wire at the eaves, and adjusted the controller so the trigger to beep (the second stage, when they got closer, was a mild shock) was about 18 inches over the tallest dogs head. Where he left it set, the trigger to shock was 3 feet inside the back door. It took almost a month to retrain one of our dogs that it was OK to go outside. I also told my son that if he ever touched the controller again, I was going to put the collar on HIM, and put the loop around his door. This was after I showed him what the shock felt like. Still pisses me off, lol.
ocarol7 Premium Member about 5 years ago
Aw, Annie’s Nope expression is beginning to resemble big sister Sophie’s……
cuzinron47 about 5 years ago
The dimension still don’t look Annieable.
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member about 5 years ago
I’m thinking if you just put some bacon outside they will be out the door in a shot.
JK1 about 5 years ago
Ahem! As I’ve been saying, since our sweet Annie (Fat-Bottomed Girl) got stuck in the doggie door (thanks for that, Dad), gotta grease that little sweetie or fix the door, Dad!
Yardley701 about 5 years ago
Gald Annie is free.
Dry and Dusty Premium Member about 5 years ago
Sophie always comes up with such good ideas !