Find our whippets on Facebook We tweet about whippets Watch our whippet videos on Youtube Read our whippet blog on Blogger View our whippet photos on Flickr View our whippet photos on Picasa

Vintage

Something Different for Joomla!

Our Dogs in SC

Our Dogs in VA

Considering a Whippet?

Timbreblue Plays in Puddles - "Simon"

A whippet is not a good choice if you have outside cats. Remember that this breed was developed to chase and kill small, furry running creatures. They may be best friends in the house, but once outside, your whippet's beloved Muffy becomes prey! Chasing is a deeply rooted whippet instinct, and you can't train it out.  Don't worry...the picture above is just a stuffed toy!

Home Juliet
About Whippets - Leads and Collars PDF Print E-mail
Article Index
About Whippets
Appearance
History
Housing
Children
Strangers
Cats
Training
Housebreaking
Exercise
The Loose Whippet
Health
Leads and Collars
How much does a whippet cost?
Finally...
All Pages

Leads and Collars

If your whippet wears a collar around the house, for daily wear we recommend flat nylon "breakaway" collars with nylon fasteners. Whippets play roughly with each other, and the breakaway latch is a safety measure in case a tooth is caught in a collar. Unfortunately we've heard many stories of dogs of all breeds badly injured or killed when one became tangled in the other's collar.

For outings we use very wide, flat lead-and-collar combinations called 'sighthound leads.' Even the best-trained whippet may lunge to the end of the lead when he sees 'prey' (anything small and fast moving!) and the wide collar stops his progress without injuring his throat. A martingale construction keeps the collar from tightening to the point of injury without allowing him to slip out when it's loosened.

Never use a metal choke chain on a whippet. Be sure to keep an ID tag on your whippet at all times, and we recommend tattooing and microchipping in addition to collar tags.



Last Updated on Saturday, 31 May 2008 19:32
 
videocelebs