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    Best training leash for Weimaraner puppy

    This is a specific conversation about Dog leashes — finding the right one — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Good instinct catching this at six months — Weimaraners are powerful, fast learners, and the habits they form now tend to stick hard. Leash choice matters more than most people realise: length affects how much slack you're managing, material affects feedback, and the attachment point changes how much leverage your dog has over you. You mentioned you want a training leash before bad habits develop, which is exactly the right time. Can you tell me a bit more — roughly how much does your pup weigh now, are you doing formal training sessions or more building good manners on daily walks, and do you have a trainer involved or working through this yourself?
    He's about 22kg already and still growing. Mostly daily walks but I want to work on loose lead walking and stopping him lunging. No trainer yet, just me.
    inparticular.ai
    Right, so you've got a strong dog that's only going to get stronger, and you're doing this solo — that actually makes leash choice more important, not less. For loose lead training, you want something in the 1.5 to 2 metre range: long enough to give him a little natural movement, short enough that you're not constantly reeling in slack when he surges. What attachment are you currently using — back clip harness, front clip, or collar?
    He's got a back clip harness at the moment. I've heard that might be making the pulling worse?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes, that's exactly right. Back clip harnesses are comfortable for dogs, but they distribute pulling force across the chest and shoulders — which is actually how sled dogs are harnessed. It makes it easier for him to lean into the lead and go. For a Weimaraner at this age, I'd switch to a front-clip harness alongside a proper training lead. The front clip steers him back toward you when he pulls rather than letting him power through it. It makes a real difference.
    View Company of Animals Pet Corrector Training Lead on Amazon
    OK that makes sense. So what lead would you actually recommend?
    inparticular.ai
    For your situation I'd go with the Ruffwear Flat Out Lead. It's a 1.5 metre flat nylon lead with a padded handle and a solid bolt snap clip — grippy enough to hold a lunging 30kg dog without the lead cutting into your hand, which matters when you're working on corrections. It's not too long, so you keep control, but not so short that he feels restricted during normal walking. The padded handle specifically is worth it for a dog that size — you'll feel the difference after 20 minutes when he's had a few surges. It's available on Amazon UK and it'll last well past puppyhood.
    View Ruffwear Flat Out Leash on Amazon
    That sounds good. Should I be using any specific technique with it or just start walking?
    inparticular.ai
    Don't just start walking — that's how you end up reinforcing exactly what you're trying to stop. The most effective thing you can do right now is stop the moment the lead goes taut. Don't pull back, don't yank — just stop completely and wait. The second he releases the tension and looks at you, move forward again. It's slow going for the first week or two but Weimaraners are smart enough that they work it out quickly once they realise pulling gets them absolutely nowhere. Pair that with a front-clip harness and the Ruffwear lead and you'll be in a much better position than most people at this stage.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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