My neighbor had 3 pits but now is down to 2 pits and he has some roommates that I'm assuming don't like the dogs as they now live outside so the corgi's and them are fence fighting bad!! I've resorted to having them on leashe in the back yard to prevent them from getting to the fence but the pits are right on the fence on their side going beserk and at some point Greg and I loose their attention so corrections don't work anymore. I need to train them to know that fence fighting is not to happen but with the 2 pits on their side going beserk I'm unsure as where to go with this? The neighbor said he's going to put a barrier up to prevent his from being on the fence but that I know will not happen and he looked at me like I was crazy when I suggested a joint training session with him on his side of the fence so all the dogs would be on leashe and getting corrected so that's not going to happen either any ideas??? I need Help!!!!!!

 

Update : Animal control was here today it seems the pit bulls attacked the neighbors dog on the otherside!! A little rat terrier so he got a 75.00 fine plus the vet bills I'm sure and they no longer can be left outside unsupervised since they got through the fence unless they are in a kennel with a top!! They also aren't out today either.

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Did I say move?
I know the feeling!! I'm staying with my sister in law right now and she has 2 corgis and I have Chesney. They like to fence fight with the two Great Danes behind us. And they are behind a 6 ft cedar fence!!! But they stick their noses through the knot holes in the fence. They've gotten better since I make them come back inside and in their kennels whenever they start. Sorry this neighbor is being so uncooperative.
Can you put a tarp or something up that blocks their view? I would be worried about the larger dogs breaking through the fence.
Oh I've already bought metal stakes and staked domn the bottom because the female pit named "Sugar" will bodily throw herself into it so hard she'd bough it out in my yard direction. So that issue is solved they can't get under unless they dig of course.
Any chance you might want to post this on Victoria Stillwell's forum? I know she's worked with distraction stuff like walking them next to the fence and teaching them ignore. She doesn't answer much on the forum, but the trainers that she has "certified" as training like her answer almost every question posted.
What kind of fence do you have and how high?
it's a 5 foot chain link fence with privacy slats so they don't have good visual of each other but stilll can see each other.
I hope they won't do this
My chainlink has privacy slats so they can't get a foot hold that way thank goodness!!
Believe me, if a pit bull wants over in the other yard, they don't need much of a "foot hold" to clear you fence. These sound like aggressive, untrained dogs. I would think about having a high voltage taser with me for myself, my dogs or anyone else in my yard if I were you.

Don't get me wrong, I've been around several pits that are pussy cats, my neighbor included. Another neighbor, well his dog was another story, When I first saw the dog, he said it was a boxer mix. I told him then someone told him a bold face lie. My foster sister had one, that was nice to family, but not strangers. She got it at the pound as a puppy, and they told her it was a boxer mix., also. Nope, it was pure pit bull.
I am truly sorry that the dogs did attack on the otherside. Just be prepared, please. Nancy
See Buddy's report of a pit bull climbing over the fence and attacking Wynstan. Not sure what kind of fence that was.
fence climbing attack

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