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There are various methods ,security doors,burglar bars,alarms systems ,surveillance cameras,high walls,electric fencing,security guards,dogs inside and outside,razor wire to name a few .you can never make your home100% safe as burglars and their likes
find ways to circumvent your safety barrier eg digging under fences and walls,coming in through the roof , poisoning the dogs ,cut burglar bars with bolt cutters,bend open bars using car jacks,force thick hardend steel blades into locks which they turn to break the locking mechanism etc etc

2006-08-28 02:29:00 · answer #1 · answered by bryte 3 · 0 0

Basic Training of the Puppy - Read here https://tr.im/eNoWU

The new puppy is certainly one of the most adorable and cuddly creatures that has ever been created. It is the most natural thing in the world to shower it with love and affection. However, at the same time it is important to realize that if you want to have a well trained adult dog, you need to begin the training process right away. The dog, like its related ancestor, the wolf, is a pack animal. One of the features of a pack is that it has a single dominant leader. Your new puppy is going to want that leader to be you, but if you do not assume that role from the very beginning, the puppy’s instincts will push him to become the leader.

The most important thing to remember about training the puppy during its first six months of life is that it must see you as the leader of the family pack. The essential thing is gaining the trust and the respect of the puppy from the beginning. You will not do this by allowing the puppy to do whatever it wants to do whenever it wants to do it. On the other hand, a certain amount of patience is required. Most people err in their early training by going to extremes one way or the other. Although you need to begin the basic training process at once, you can not expect your dog to do too much at first. Basic obedience training is fine and should include simple commands like sit, stay, and come. Remember that trying to teach the dog advanced obedience techniques when it is a puppy is much like trying to teach a five year old child algebra.

It is also important to restrain from cruel or abusive treatment of the puppy. You can not beat obedience into your dog, and it certainly is not going to engender feeling of respect and trust. House breaking is an area where this usually becomes a problem because of the anger that is triggered when the puppy fails and creates a mess inside the home. Although this issue must be addressed without anger, it most be addressed. If you allow the puppy to eliminate inside the house, it will continue to do so as an adult dog. The same thing is true of other destructive or dangerous behavior such as chewing and biting. Do not expect the puppy to grow out of it. You are going to need to train the puppy out of it, but you should do so firmly but with a sense of play and fun using positive reinforcement and lots of love and praise for good behavior.

2016-07-20 01:21:47 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Enormous dogs and large caliber weapons.

Truthfully, dogs are a more effective deterrent to breaking in than most alarms. They're there 24/7 essentially, very protective, noisy, and do their thing to keep the person out instead of letting whomever is responsible *after* the fact.

There are the drawbacks of dog ownership (feeding, cleaning, noses in the crotches of guests) so it's a bit of give and take :)

2006-08-28 09:31:16 · answer #3 · answered by Trid 6 · 0 0

A dog is the best deterent, even a small one (although who would want a small dog I don't know) burglers don't like noise. I also keep a 20 ga shotgun (shotguns are simple, easy to use but are difficult to shoot yourself with, reletively easy to hit a target with and don't overpenetrate reletive to pistols and rifles)and think that every home should have a firearm. Remember it is better to have and not need than need and not have.

2006-08-28 05:17:57 · answer #4 · answered by medic 5 · 1 0

Let's start with smoke detectors. Dead bolts on all exterior doors. Solid wood bedroom door, with deadbolt.(has a much longer burn time in the event of a fire, and gives you a safe room while you wait for police). An alarm system, with panic button in bedroom. No bars on windows, they are deadly in a fire. If you have natural gas service I would recommend a carbon monoxide detector.

2006-08-28 02:27:21 · answer #5 · answered by Don 6 · 0 0

Build it halfway between Hull and Stavanger and plug up all lhe leaky holes. This is just as clueless an answer as is your question, of course. So, what do you really want to know? Safe from what? Burglars? Landslip? Fire? Kids? In-laws? Spiders?

2006-08-28 01:53:48 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I depend on my 3 Boxer dogs to keep my home safe.

2006-08-28 02:03:46 · answer #7 · answered by Caroline H 5 · 0 0

I have two large dogs, two small dogs, and a handgun and I know how to use it, also a shotgun, if anyone hears you **** one of those they will think twice! Don't leave yourself open for anyone to enter your house, lock doors and windows and install motion dectector lights.

2006-08-28 03:50:57 · answer #8 · answered by judy_derr38565 6 · 0 0

Passive infra red alarm system that calls the police...

Plus large protective dog, pet couger etc

2006-08-28 02:02:10 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

locks on all windows and doors, possibly a house alarm.


i have 3 dogs seems to keep my home safe so far.

2006-08-28 01:50:16 · answer #10 · answered by ♥fluffykins_69♥ 5 · 0 0

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