I would think they want a pet that can’t be trackes to any owner, which, to me is a scary thought.
I have looked into the GPS collars, but it seems like you need to charge the battery often. My dogs generally behave, but I have a young, hyper jrt.
I would think they want a pet that can’t be trackes to any owner, which, to me is a scary thought.
I have looked into the GPS collars, but it seems like you need to charge the battery often. My dogs generally behave, but I have a young, hyper jrt.
Not that I’ve ever heard of. GPS trackers that work more than a few hundred yards are still pretty big. The ones that help you find your keys (in your house) are kind of small, but they wouldn’t be much use for a lost dog.
I work at a vet office and encounter this regularly. People are cray.
Well, I’ve heard of a GPS collar (business is in Florida) which can track your dog. I “googled” it when I found an unauthorized charge for $189.99 on my credit card. Thankfully, my credit card company removed the charge.
I DID contact the company, trying to find out to whom they shipped their collar, or barring that, the “area” to which the collar had been shipped. I had used my credit card twice recently, and I wanted to either “out” or “eliminate” one of the possible parties who could have used my credit card number. Of course, it could have been someone hacking into a company’s website, which wouldn’t have been the company’s fault, albeit a security risk.
Well, whatever. The company never responded to me, not even to say, “No, we can’t do that.” For what it’s worth, here is a ‘googled’ link to GPS collars.