Leashes (Leads) – Do They Really Make a Training Difference?
Dog leashes are usually on the list of the essential equipment of a dog, particularly urban residents. Dog leads provide security and ensure safety of your animal when you walk along busy streets or in crowds. It is hard to lose an animal if you have it on the end of a leash. Yet is it essential to use a dog leash during training?

Leashes
Dog leads or leashes come in all types. You have the extending leashes allowing your animal some freedom to explore while curtailing it quickly if there are signs of trouble. You have short leather leashes. You also have dog leashes of nylon, wire and other materials. They come in all different colors, lengths and suit different types of dogs, people and budgets.
Dog leash training usually asks for a more expensive and longer leash. The standard dog leash for training is 6-feet (2 meters). Many favor leather. It is easier on the hands. Leather is also durable, strong and long lasting. Plastic and blends can hurt the hands. Chain leashes are totally impractical. In fact, chains may scare or startle a young dog or puppy.
The thickness of the training leash depends upon eh size and type of dog. Average width is best for average dogs. If you have a pulling do, you will need a wider leash. In all cases, you must have a sturdy snap.
The Purpose of a Dog Leash
Leashes provide safety for your dog in public. They can act as a security blanket for both you and your dog. You each know where the other is at all times. It is also a way of keeping control of a situation where your dog may be fine, but other people are not in control of themselves or their children’s behavior.
Using leashes for training is one means of ensuring learning in a dog. It has its supporters. Leashes in training help control the situation in an open field or other climate. They ensure your dog does not become easily distracted and pays attention to the training lesson of the day.
Sort recalls on leash help establish a pattern. They set the environment for long recalls without a leash. Extending leashes and lunge lines may also play a part of formal training. Lung lines are light and lengthy.
Why or Why Not Use a Dog Leash
There are those who consider dog leashes a crutch. They see them as a weakness creating a strong dependency for the trainer. The dog may realize this and take advantage. Some recommend the use of a clicker or alternative forms of training. The clicker, coupled with a reward system encourages the dog to stay close and perform the right moves. You must perform all off leash training in a controlled environment. A backyard or fenced in area is essential to prevent possible injury or loss.
Training with a leash is seen essential by many trainers. Most also believe the final goal of leash training is for you and the dog to walk without a leash. Yet, leash trainers will argue a leash is essential in the learning process. To an extent, they are right. At shows, dogs need to perform on a leash. Dogs need to show the judge they are comfortable and responsive on a leash.
In a city, leash laws are in place. If your dog cannot walk on a leash, no matter how well behaved it may be, you face a fine. Furthermore, the average dog person may not be adept at preventing their pet from spooking against the unexpected. The leash provides security against such problems.
Final Comments
Dog leashes serve a part of dog training. You may not need one to train your dog, but you need to train your dog to behave on one. Safety concerns and security reasons are at the basis for this requirement of dog training. This may not seem fair to those who see leashes as restrictive and unnecessary, but in today’s urban world, dog leashes are the law.


