What it’s good for
These are mainly for training, not casual neighborhood walks.
Great for:
-
Recall training (“come” command)
-
Letting your dog explore safely in parks or fields
-
Distance obedience training
-
Hiking in open areas where off-leash isn’t allowed
📏 Which length should you choose?
Small dogs
-
Backyard or park practice → 3–5 m
-
Recall training → 5–10 m
Medium dogs
-
General training → 5 m
-
Recall/outdoor fields → 10 m
Large dogs
-
Obedience work → 5–10 m
-
Serious recall training → 10–15 m (only in wide open spaces)
If you’re unsure, 10 meters (33 ft) is the most versatile training length.
⚠️ Important safety notes
Long leashes can be AMAZING — but only if used right:
-
❌ Don’t use on busy sidewalks (can tangle people/bikes)
-
❌ Don’t wrap around your hand (rope burns are real)
-
✅ Use in open grass fields or large parks
-
✅ Wear gloves if your dog pulls hard
-
✅ Attach to a back-clip harness instead of a collar for strong dogs
🧵 About the “dual color” part
That’s just style — two-tone leash. No effect on performance.
👍 Bottom line
This is a solid, inexpensive training tool if you want to work on recall or give your dog safe freedom. Not meant to replace your normal walking leash.
If you tell me your dog’s size and what you want to train, I’ll help you pick the exact length.
What it’s good for
These are mainly for training, not casual neighborhood walks.
Great for:
-
Recall training (“come” command)
-
Letting your dog explore safely in parks or fields
-
Distance obedience training
-
Hiking in open areas where off-leash isn’t allowed
📏 Which length should you choose?
Small dogs
-
Backyard or park practice → 3–5 m
-
Recall training → 5–10 m
Medium dogs
-
General training → 5 m
-
Recall/outdoor fields → 10 m
Large dogs
-
Obedience work → 5–10 m
-
Serious recall training → 10–15 m (only in wide open spaces)
If you’re unsure, 10 meters (33 ft) is the most versatile training length.
⚠️ Important safety notes
Long leashes can be AMAZING — but only if used right:
-
❌ Don’t use on busy sidewalks (can tangle people/bikes)
-
❌ Don’t wrap around your hand (rope burns are real)
-
✅ Use in open grass fields or large parks
-
✅ Wear gloves if your dog pulls hard
-
✅ Attach to a back-clip harness instead of a collar for strong dogs
🧵 About the “dual color” part
That’s just style — two-tone leash. No effect on performance.
👍 Bottom line
This is a solid, inexpensive training tool if you want to work on recall or give your dog safe freedom. Not meant to replace your normal walking leash.
If you tell me your dog’s size and what you want to train, I’ll help you pick the exact length.
What it’s good for
These are mainly for training, not casual neighborhood walks.
Great for:
-
Recall training (“come” command)
-
Letting your dog explore safely in parks or fields
-
Distance obedience training
-
Hiking in open areas where off-leash isn’t allowed
📏 Which length should you choose?
Small dogs
-
Backyard or park practice → 3–5 m
-
Recall training → 5–10 m
Medium dogs
-
General training → 5 m
-
Recall/outdoor fields → 10 m
Large dogs
-
Obedience work → 5–10 m
-
Serious recall training → 10–15 m (only in wide open spaces)
If you’re unsure, 10 meters (33 ft) is the most versatile training length.
⚠️ Important safety notes
Long leashes can be AMAZING — but only if used right:
-
❌ Don’t use on busy sidewalks (can tangle people/bikes)
-
❌ Don’t wrap around your hand (rope burns are real)
-
✅ Use in open grass fields or large parks
-
✅ Wear gloves if your dog pulls hard
-
✅ Attach to a back-clip harness instead of a collar for strong dogs
🧵 About the “dual color” part
That’s just style — two-tone leash. No effect on performance.
👍 Bottom line
This is a solid, inexpensive training tool if you want to work on recall or give your dog safe freedom. Not meant to replace your normal walking leash.
If you tell me your dog’s size and what you want to train, I’ll help you pick the exact length.











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