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    GPS Trackers for Two Weimaraners

    This is a specific conversation about GPS pet trackers — peace of mind if they escape — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    GPS trackers are genuinely useful for dogs like yours — Weimaraners are high-drive hunting breeds that will lock onto a scent and disappear into woodland without a second thought. They work best where there's decent mobile coverage, and you'll need a subscription (usually £5–8 a month), but for off-lead dogs in rural or wooded areas they're worth every penny. To point you to the right option: are both dogs already microchipped, and when you say bolting in woodland, are we talking a specific walk spot you go to regularly, or varied locations across a wider area?
    Yes, both microchipped. We walk in a few different woodland areas, so varied locations. I'd really prefer to manage both dogs on a single subscription if possible rather than paying twice.
    inparticular.ai
    Good — microchipping is the foundation, so that's sorted. On the single subscription point, that's actually the key question here, because most GPS tracker brands charge per device. Can I ask: are you happy buying two separate tracker units as long as the monthly fee covers both, or do you need it all through one app account as well?
    One app account would be ideal, yes. And ideally I can see both dogs at once on a map.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — that narrows it down nicely. My clear recommendation for you is the Tractive GPS DOG 4. Here's why it fits your situation specifically: Tractive lets you add multiple trackers to a single account and view all of them simultaneously on one map, which is exactly what you need for two dogs moving through woodland. You'd buy two units (one for each dog) but you can manage both subscriptions through the same app, and Tractive regularly offer family or multi-dog plans that work out cheaper than two separate subscriptions elsewhere. The DOG 4 has live tracking that updates every 2–3 seconds when you trigger it, a solid battery life of around 7 days on standard mode, and it's waterproof to IPX7 — relevant when Weimaraners are crashing through wet undergrowth. It uses a combination of GPS and mobile networks, so performance in varied woodland locations will depend on signal, but it's one of the most reliable networks in the UK. Attach one to each collar, set up a virtual fence around the car park if you want an alert the moment they stray, and you'll be able to see exactly where both are from your phone.
    View Tractive GPS Dog Tracker on Amazon
    That sounds good. What's the subscription cost roughly, and is the battery really enough for a full day's walking plus leaving them on overnight?
    inparticular.ai
    Tractive's standard plan is around £5 a month per tracker, so roughly £10 total for two — though they do multi-device discounts, especially if you pay annually, which can bring it lower. On battery: in standard tracking mode (updating every few minutes) you'll comfortably get 5–7 days, so yes, a day's walk plus overnight is no problem at all. It's only if you're in live mode — the 2–3 second updates — that it drains faster, around 2–4 hours. The sensible approach is to use standard mode day-to-day and only trigger live tracking the moment one of them bolts. That way you're preserving battery while still getting the fast location fix when it actually matters.
    That makes sense. I'll go with two Tractive DOG 4s then. Thanks.
    inparticular.ai
    Good choice — two units, one app, both dogs on the map at once. Set up the activity zones and escape alerts before your first walk so you're not fumbling with settings in the car park. The trackers clip onto standard collars, but make sure the fit is snug on both dogs — Weimaraners have lean necks and you don't want one vibrating loose in thick undergrowth. Enjoy the woodland walks with a bit more peace of mind.

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

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