How to Use

  • Fit the harness correctly — adjust the straps so the harness sits snugly across your dog's chest and back without restricting shoulder movement or pinching the skin.
  • Check the fit before every walk — run two fingers under the straps to ensure the harness is secure but not overly tight, and confirm all fastenings are fully engaged.
  • Attach and grip the lead — hold the traction rope firmly with a relaxed but controlled grip, allowing your dog a comfortable range of movement while keeping tension available when needed.
  • Use reflective side outward — position the leash so the reflective strip faces outward toward oncoming traffic or light sources for maximum visibility.
  • Guide, don't yank — with a chest and back harness, gentle directional guidance is more effective than sharp corrections; let the even pressure distribution do the work.
  • Clean after use — wipe down with a damp cloth after muddy or wet walks and allow to air dry fully to keep the Oxford cloth in good condition.
How to Use
💛 Why Customers Love It

💛 Why Customers Love It

Collar-only leashes remain one of the most common causes of neck and trachea strain in dogs, particularly for breeds that tend to pull. A harness-style lead that connects at both the chest and back changes the dynamic entirely — instead of all the tension concentrating on a single point at the throat, the pressure is shared across a much broader, more resilient area of the body. Dog owners who make the switch typically notice their dogs pulling less within days, simply because the new pressure points are less rewarding to pull against. For owners who walk early or finish work after dark, the reflective strip is a feature that genuinely earns its place — it's the kind of thing you don't fully appreciate until a car slows down because they spotted your dog from a distance. The Oxford cloth holds up to rain, mud, and repeated use without losing its shape or strength, making this a reliable everyday essential rather than a product that needs replacing every season.