LD1
Epic Contributor
We have the marco polo. Also an invisible fence.
Bought the marco polo because about a year ago, the dogs must have found a weak spot in the invisible fence, and it seemed like once a week they would get out. I could find them......but getting them to come to me when they knew they were in trouble was a different story. They'd bolt the other direction.
Kinda sucks, because you want to discipline the dog for getting out, and they know that they did wrong. And you really dont want to bribe them to come to you, because then they think they did good.
The marco polo isnt like it displays a map and an exact direction to the dog. Rather its an arrow, and a number from 0 to 100 to indicate range (which is really signal strength.) But it is a help and points you in the right direction. We did some testing with it driving out in the car and leaving a collar at home. HAd no problem out to over a mile.
They claim up to 2 miles, but its like 2-way radios.....all depends on terrain, LOS, etc. I have no doubt it will do 2 miles out in kansas.....but probably wont get that in WV mountains. But its certainly more than 1/4 mile.
Never actually got to use it on the dogs. Started putting both collars on them during the day (they sleep inside at night), and after a few weeks of them not running off any more, we just slowly quit putting the tracker collars on them. Havent had a problem for a year now.....but it comes and goes with these dogs. Once they find a way out...or if they figure their invisible fence collar batteries are getting weak....they exploit it. Once I give them a few reminders by walking them around the perimiter and letting them get hit a few times....they seem to straighten up for quite awhile.
So sorry I aint much help. With all the affordable GPS tech and smart phones out there, you would think there would be a better solution for both tracking, and containment. And if there is, I have not found it yet.
Bought the marco polo because about a year ago, the dogs must have found a weak spot in the invisible fence, and it seemed like once a week they would get out. I could find them......but getting them to come to me when they knew they were in trouble was a different story. They'd bolt the other direction.
Kinda sucks, because you want to discipline the dog for getting out, and they know that they did wrong. And you really dont want to bribe them to come to you, because then they think they did good.
The marco polo isnt like it displays a map and an exact direction to the dog. Rather its an arrow, and a number from 0 to 100 to indicate range (which is really signal strength.) But it is a help and points you in the right direction. We did some testing with it driving out in the car and leaving a collar at home. HAd no problem out to over a mile.
They claim up to 2 miles, but its like 2-way radios.....all depends on terrain, LOS, etc. I have no doubt it will do 2 miles out in kansas.....but probably wont get that in WV mountains. But its certainly more than 1/4 mile.
Never actually got to use it on the dogs. Started putting both collars on them during the day (they sleep inside at night), and after a few weeks of them not running off any more, we just slowly quit putting the tracker collars on them. Havent had a problem for a year now.....but it comes and goes with these dogs. Once they find a way out...or if they figure their invisible fence collar batteries are getting weak....they exploit it. Once I give them a few reminders by walking them around the perimiter and letting them get hit a few times....they seem to straighten up for quite awhile.
So sorry I aint much help. With all the affordable GPS tech and smart phones out there, you would think there would be a better solution for both tracking, and containment. And if there is, I have not found it yet.