How to fix a stuck dog collar

Take out the one next to it and then do this: turn the tip to the side to take it out. —————— Before commenting please read the following. I received some nasty comments about the prong collar being harmful to the dog. 1) We have a 6 year old 70 pound male German Shepherd dog that was rescued and was about to be euthanized or killed at the pound. 2) Hispanic owners were faced with an ultimatum from the owner: get rid of the dog or leave because the dog was aggressive towards other dogs. 3) we took him to two training sites, Baxter and Beasley, at Bark University. Both coaches asked us to buy a spike collar. We refused because it seemed painful and cruel. In fact, another supposed trainer also told us the same thing. We followed his advice. In the obedience training classes we took him to (about eight classes), almost every dog ​​had a prong collar except our dog. We bought a more humane Mendota strap. 4) after this there were a couple of incidents where we couldn’t control the strong dog even after his obedience training. Thanks to Jesus nothing bad happened, otherwise they would have taken him back to the pound, euthanized him, and fined us. We learned our lesson. The spike collar is safe and helps control him and he knows what it is. Of course, a prong collar should never be made too tight; we keep it loose and it only serves as a slight correction.

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