🐾 Command respect, not just attention—train like a pro, wherever life takes you!
The Bousnic Dog Shock Collar is a versatile, rechargeable training tool with a 3300ft range, suitable for dogs from 5 to 120lbs. Featuring 3 humane training modes with multiple intensity levels, an IP67 waterproof receiver, and exceptional battery life, it empowers professional dog owners to train effectively in any environment while maintaining safety and comfort.
A**Z
From Wild Boar to House Pet: A Shockingly Good Investment
Wish I had bought this collar a year ago, could’ve saved myself hundreds in dog training bills and a couple of gray hairs.We have a two-year-old pitbull/German Shepherd/cattle dog mix, which basically means he was born with a PhD in mischief and a minor in track and field. If you know anything about these breeds, you know they’re smart, energetic, and think “stay” is just a suggestion.Overall, he’s a well-mannered canine sidekick with the occasional flair for going rogue and showcasing some truly intolerable habits.Houdini in Fur:His worst offense and the real reason we purchased this product is his tendency to escape the front door. If my kids or senior dad so much as crack the front door, he’s gone. Bolts like a wild hog into the neighbor’s 10-acre Disney safari. He’s immune to bribery, a T-bone steak is not match for the allure of rabbit and coyote turds, and general chaos of running free that awaits him next door.At my husband’s urging (and against my better judgment), we got a shock collar. We have, let’s call them, different training philosophies.The first time I tested he was digging up my garden. I pressed the beep gave a correction— nothing. Vibration — nothing. He was busy excavating the backyard when I hit him with a low-level zap. Still nothing. So I cranked it to 7. Hit the button. He shot into the air like he’d been launched by NASA and spun around looking for the wasp that surely got him. I, naturally, felt like a monster.After some trial and error, we found the magic formula: level 16 for vibration, level 3 for zap. He’s gotten smart now, hears the beep and decides he might actually listen.Yesterday was the big test. My daughter and I staged an “accidental” front door escape. He bolted, I called/beeped/vibrated him. No dice. I zapped him at 3. He kept running. I continued leveling up and zapping him as I jogged after him yelling “Go home!” like a desperate lunatic. Still no reaction — dude was in the zone. It’s truly a testament to how overstimulated he is once he’s free on this land.Finally, a jolt of level nine electricity to his jugular broke his concentration and spirit. He froze mid-run, turned around and trotted home like a startled coyote, ears back, head and tail lowered.Since then, Forrest has changed his ways. We still use the collar, but these days a simple beep is enough to keep him in line, no more backyard excavations, no more grand larceny of shoes and stuffed animals. When we tell him to get off the couch, he actually does it.Even the front door, his old escape hatch, has lost its appeal. He now waits politely to be leashed up, like a proper gentleman. One day he wandered into the front yard after my 5 year old careless left the door open. He sniffed around, looked back at me when I called him, and he came right back inside. On walks, he actually makes eye contact with me . And for the first time in two years, I’m not being yanked down the street like a waterskier behind a speedboat.I think the shock collar broke him like as wild stallion. Nowadays his worst crime is sitting on the couch staring longingly out the front window, dreaming of the days when he could run free with abandon.
M**N
Works great on my stubborn dachshund
Bought this for my stubborn dachshund who is 3 years old. Would love to let him run around and not leashed but he does not like the command COME, lol. I tested all the things on myself. The beep, vibrate and shock. The beep on high, the others on lowest. Reason the beep on high as he'd take off and I wouldn't know where he was. So after watching video for set up I put it on him. We went outside and he started going his way. I beeped it and said come and he came right back, ears down. We stayed outside as I wanted him to get comfortable and he ventured farther then I wanted. I called come without the beep and didn't come so I yelled come with the beep and he came running. The rest of the day he stayed close. I rewarded him with treats and praised him. It was so nice him listening. I took collar off after one hour as he was doing so good staying close. He did act scared as he hid under chair like he does for thunder . At supper he jumps up begging on my husband. He told him No down. I beeped the receiver, mind you, it was on the table, not on him, and he got down and stood two feet from table. This was all day one 1st time. Mind you, I have a beeper you click I'd tried when he was younger and he would just bark at it . So for first day and only one hour, two beeps I am thrilled. Hopefully he responds the same as yesterday.
N**W
It Works
I purchased this for my Chihuahua mixed giving me the blues after taking him in because my sister moved and had to give him away. Many people encourage me to sell him since he's a crazy, little bad dog that would poop in your room or pee on your tire for revenge if you are mean to him and then look at you with Michael Myer eyes. But I had him since he was seven weeks ago, gave him to my niece and nephews years ago as a Christmas gift, and refuse to give up on the little man because I know how it feels to not be wanted.Like most Chihuahuas, he suffers from Napoleon syndrome and has a lot of big dog energy. He's fiesty for a little guy and doesn't let his small size hold him back. I treat him like having a pitbull because when he goes into attack mode and starts barking and is ready to bite. His teeth are sharp and can draw blood. I had to knock him with the broom quite a few times. We go into an alpha match until he backs down To lock him in his cage for being bad or crate training is nonstop barking.Yet, I gave this shock collar a try and at first was like this doesn't work. Then he did the barking in the cage, I zapped him and he kept barking then eventually gave up and went silence. That little sucker is tough and takes that shock mode even at 50 without making a sound. My mom told me to stop using shock because it could kill him even though he refuses to respond regardless of the intensity. So I stopped using shock and for some reason, the beep is the effective mode for him. I want him to go to his cage, I press the beep sound and he walks to his cage without protest. He starts barking in his cage for being locked up because he's punished. I hit the beep sounds and he quiets down. I let him out to go use the bathroom in the morning and he wanders off. I hit the beep and he comes around the corner back to me.I thought the shock was broken until I tried it on my well behaved dog one time stupidly because my only issue with him is that he loves to wander and goes far out to relieve himself. He welped when I shocked him and that's when I realized it worked and my Chihuahua took pain like a little gangster aka Lil Pitbull. My well behaved dog now all of sudden now knows how to relieve himself close to home without wandering and when I used the beep on my Chihuahua, the well behaved dog hears it too and comes back to me or just straight walks home to the front door waiting for me to open the door. The only negative side effective was I think my well behaved dog was afraid to tell him he needed to go to the bathroom so he urinate and defecated on the puppy pad. When I realized it wasn't the Chihuahua, I scolded my well behaved dog that he goes outside not in the house. He listened and that was the last time he did so. So I wouldn't recommend using the shock mode since it was ineffective with the Chihuahua and nearly reset my well behaved dog back to the frightened dog he was when I took him in many years ago because no one else wanted him.So it's been a cool experience. My Chihuahua lets me put the shock collar on him without a problem and sometimes if it is not on, I can still give him a command like go to cage, he goes.I still have issues with him like he may poop on the puppy pad but urinate elsewhere. Running off and chasing after people. My main goals are to get him to poop and pee on the puppy pad and have accepted he can't hold his bladder and bowels as long as my well behaved dog can , no more chasing after people or biting, and for him to be around people at events without chasing, biting, or barking at people. He's a work in process but the attack modes are rare now. He's quiet and doesn't bark as much. I can put him in the cage without him immediately barking. He did run over to a gentleman barking at him then stopped and sniffed him. When I called him back, he comes running extremely fast with a big smile on his face. So the beep mode on the shock collar definitely is helping him become a better behaved dog. It also conditions my well behaved dog to obey even though he only wore it once and I only purchased one for my Chihuahua.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 days ago