Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (5/5)

Pet Corrector canister in hand

A Bit of Background

I've got an Alaskan Malamute called Ice. If you know the breed, you already know: they're gorgeous, stubborn, full of energy, and — when they're young — absolute menaces with their teeth. Puppy biting is par for the course with any dog, but Malamutes are big, strong, and built for endurance. By the time Ice's biting phase kicked in properly, it wasn't just annoying, it was genuinely uncomfortable.

I tried everything the internet suggests. A firm "no." Yelping to mimic how another puppy would react. Redirecting to toys. Time-outs. Some of it helped a bit, some of it didn't. Ice would look at me, understand completely, and carry on regardless. Classic Malamute.

Then I came across the Pet Corrector Dog Trainer — a small canister that releases a sharp burst of compressed air with a hissing sound. Figured it was worth a shot.

What It Is and How It Works

The Pet Corrector is simple: it's a pressurised canister, roughly the size of a travel deodorant, filled with compressed gas. When you press the top, it makes a sharp, sudden hissing sound — similar to compressed air or a snake. It doesn't harm the dog in any way; it just startles them and interrupts the behaviour in the moment.

The idea is to use it as an interrupter, not a punishment. The sound breaks the dog's focus mid-behaviour, giving you a window to redirect them to something more appropriate. Over time, the association between the unwanted behaviour and that unpleasant noise builds up and the behaviour stops.

Simple premise. And in Ice's case — it worked almost immediately.

What Happened With Ice

I used it the first time Ice started biting during play. Pressed it once. He froze, looked genuinely confused, backed off, and the biting stopped. I redirected him to a toy and that was that.

Within a day or two, the biting had dropped off dramatically. Within a week, it was essentially gone.

The most surprising thing? I barely even need to spray it anymore. Now, I just have to hold it up and Ice recognises it and backs down. It's become a visual cue as much as an auditory one. I'd say 90% of the time the canister stays in my hand unused — just its presence is enough.

I genuinely wish I'd found this sooner. We went through weeks of sore hands and frayed patience when this thing could have sorted it in days.

Value for Money

This is where Amazon earns its place. I'd seen the Pet Corrector in a couple of local pet shops and it was noticeably more expensive on the shelf — we're talking a meaningful difference for what is a small canister.

On Amazon it's significantly cheaper, and if you've got Prime, it turns up next day. For something this effective, even the pet shop price would be worth it — but paying less for the same product is always a win.

Honest Pros and Cons

Pros:

  • Works fast — saw results within 1-2 days for puppy biting
  • Non-harmful — just a sound and a puff of air
  • Over time, just holding it is often enough
  • Compact and easy to carry around the house
  • Genuinely good value, especially on Amazon

Cons:

  • The canister doesn't last forever — you will need to replace it eventually (though mine has lasted well)
  • Some dogs may be less sensitive to the sound and might need more repetition
  • Not a substitute for training — works best as an interrupter alongside proper reinforcement

Would I Recommend It?

Absolutely. If you've got a puppy who's biting, a dog with a stubborn habit you can't break, or just a Malamute who's decided the rules don't apply to him — give this a go before you spend weeks frustrated with methods that aren't landing.

It's one of those products that seems too simple to work until it does. I'd buy it again without hesitation, and I've already mentioned it to a couple of friends with young dogs.


Check the current price on Amazon UK: Pet Corrector Dog Trainer

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