[NAGDU] collar question

Julie J. julielj at neb.rr.com
Mon May 16 11:48:39 UTC 2016


It was people on this very list that told me to use the tag silencers. 
That's been years and years ago now...I think I've been on this list for 
something like 12 years.  Anyway I took the advice and it made a huge 
difference! Thanks to those people for helping me out and I'm glad I could 
pass it along to help more people.

Julie
Courage to Dare: A Blind Woman's Quest to Train her Own Guide Dog is now 
available! Get the book here:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00QXZSMOC
-----Original Message----- 
From: Lisie Foster via NAGDU
Sent: Monday, May 16, 2016 3:11 AM
To: NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Cc: Lisie Foster
Subject: Re: [NAGDU] collar question

Julie, I would never have connected the use of a tag silencer to having 
fewer random dog encounters, but I truly believe you're on to something!

I've often wondered why I've had extremely few encounters with random dogs 
with any of my dogs, and I think you've just solved that for me. I've used 
tag silencers on my working dogs and pet dogs for years.

My current dog can't stand to have the type of tag silencer I usually use, 
the Quiet Spot fabric ones that are like little, stretchy, cloth bags that 
cover their tags, on his collar. So I used a bright color of decorative 
masking tape to wrap the top of his tags around the split-rings that attach 
the tags to his collar (he wears the same one while working and at home) to 
keep them from jingling. I always imagined quiet tags helped attract less 
human attention, but never thought about other dogs. I believe you're 
exactly right!

Lisie and Finn
lisiefoster at yahoo.com
Sent from my iPhone

> On May 15, 2016, at 8:54 AM, Julie J. via NAGDU <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> At home Monty wears no collar at all.  Jetta wears a nylon buckle collar 
> with her tags that do jingle.  It does help me keep track of her.  She's 
> pretty well stopped using my houseplants as a salad bar, but every now and 
> then she thinks about it.  The tag jingle helps me call her away from 
> getting into trouble.
>
> When out Monty wears a martingale with his tags covered by a tag silencer. 
> I found when I started using the tag silencer or not having the dog wear 
> tags when out, that it cut down dramatically on interference from other 
> dogs.  Those tags jingling are like the ice cream truck jingle to little 
> kids.  They hear that familiar tune and come running.   Silencing the tags 
> was the biggest single thing I ever did to help cut down on random 
> unwanted dog encounters.
>
> Julie
> Courage to Dare: A Blind Woman's Quest to Train her Own Guide Dog is now 
> available! Get the book here:
> http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00QXZSMOC
>
>
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