We have many customers looking for retractable leashes. This article
summarized all the reasons we don’t carry or recommend retractable
leashes.
Article by John Perritano
Nov 2, 2018
I went to go buy cat food one day in June and I came home with a
rescue puppy. I couldn't take her home unless I had a leash. Since I
wasn't planning on bringing home a puppy that day (totally forgot the
Meow Mix, by the way), I didn't have a leash in the truck. Instead, I
walked back into the pet store to see what they had.
"Do you want a retractable one?" the clerk asked. "No," I said.
"They're dangerous." I've had a few dogs in my life, and not once have I
purchased a retractable leash. While others swear by them, the dog
trainer hammered it into my head years ago that all dogs in her class
had to be on
regular leashes.
She then gave a litany of reasons why, the least of which is that
retractable leashes can snap, break or shatter, causing injury to dog
and person.
Dereka Williams found that out the hard way. As reported by ABC News
in 2009, Dereka, a 12-year-old at the time, was walking her dog on a
retractable leash, when the leash broke shooting a piece of metal into
her eye. She has since undergone three surgeries to her eye and will
likely have permanent damage.
Retractable leashes allow dogs to walk a good 20 to 30 feet (6
to 9 meters) ahead of a person. They typically feature a plastic handle
with a button that locks and retracts the cord, so dog owners can
regulate how far their pup can roam. Yet, horror stories abound as to
what can happen if the cord breaks or malfunctions. A person can get
facial cuts, broken teeth, eye injuries and broken bones. They can also
get caught up in the wire cord, resulting in a number of horrific
injuries, including skin lacerations and even amputations.
In 2007, Consumer Reports
and the Consumer Union analyzed dog leash injuries and found 16,564
people went to the hospital to get treated for injuries sustained with
pet leashes, although the magazine did not define which types of
leashes, though it did say about 10.5 percent of those injuries involved
children 10 and younger. However, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission
recalled 223,000 retractable leashes
sold between 2007 and 2008 under the name SlyDog because the metal
clasps connecting the leash to a dog's collar was susceptible to
breaking while in use. (This was the brand of leash 12-year-old Dereka
Williams was using when she was injured.)
And nearly a quarter of those leash injuries involved fingers. One woman lost a finger
when her dog's retractable leash exploded after her 90-pound (40
kilogram) Labrador retriever bolted and the cord wrapped around her
finger, essentially ripping it off.
Retractable leashes can be problematic for dogs, too. Because
there is so much cord, dogs can walk into the road very quickly and get
hit by a car before their owners can even react. The cord can also snap
in two or get pulled out of the handle if a dog decides to chase
something. In addition, dogs can
hurt their necks
if they run and hit the limit of the cord. Not to mention, retractable
leashes encourage dogs to pull because they learn over time that pulling
rewards them with more leash.