Sensors with sharp light,cameras. Get mirror film on the windows(very effective). The stalker never know when he's been watched. If You go or hide outside,be quiet and calm. Sneak up on him with a weapon without a word or sound. Etc😅. Yes I know a thing or two. Had stalkers all my life. Lets say i have tried different things Fx a false outside rotten staircase that collapsed midways...oh the screams..😊 But now camera system are cheap and can be fixed by a normal person. Do not use a bureau,they hire stalkers. Figured out that too.
THANK you for sharing your experiences and insights! Mirror film on windows, neat, I'd never have thought of that. Sensors with sharp light cameras, yep, those are great. And I love the rotten staircase trap, hehehe, would've loved to be a fly on the wall when that went down!
@alexandradittmann8588 hi! Thanks! Yes. HE didn't show up again . In fact he left the country. Must add;I waited approx 15 minutes after the screams before checking. Gone. Painful for sure. And the shock effect is the most important.😁 Adding ;a drone to use now and then. With night infrared camera. And be unpredictable fhs. Psychos are most of all afraid of..well the same. Acting skills. Good luck.👍 Have fun😎
@@alexandradittmann8588 😁 thanks. The only issue is; there is always more of the sort😖. I never get left alone wherever I live. Strange. One time I had a gsd and he was a masterpiece. . Even went on a military training schutz(?) dog school. Well,we dropped out . Didn't like the way those people handled their dogs. Nah, to me a dog is my best friend and I'm its guardian. Now,its only small dog for me after "the accident". Cant risk being pulled down. I like to walk alone in nature. That went well for approx eight months after moving here. Then my dog signaled without a sound (trained that way)that someone followed. Nice! Not. Was stupid to forget to change time and route a while. Well well well. One late night I cornered him with his back to steep cliffs on 3 sides . Knew the terrain and calculated the time he probably thought I had already passed by. Awkvard small talk first and then I stood there in silence just a tad too long🤭. And bid goodbye. Havent seen him since. Obviously didn't knew my background. Been in war zones in africa. Learned to play psycho to survive. But tired of have to bend my life around precautions. But remember to never!feel helpless.😊
One woman's wilderness also had to leave her land in Canada with her German shepherd as people were turning up on her land. I think the weirdo s are praying on single women ❤
@@alexandradittmann8588 it's really scary, I'm from the UK and moved to the mountains of southern Italy 5 years ago, I also have a working line German shepherd, who does attack anything that comes on to the property, and I've had some strange things happen up here, but I worry that she is a dog and has no weapon and what happens if there's more than 1 person. We live in scary times 🙏
@@pom-pom Scary times indeed... So good to know that you, too, have a reliable guard dog. Hmmm... In case there's more than 1 person, what to do... One option is to get her a canine partner - maybe a male Shepherd to back her up should the need occur. Once there's 2 dogs on scene, not only the intimidation factor is higher, so people will think twice before entering your property, but also: 2 guard dogs naturally work in a team to attack intruders, I've seen this happen with both 4-legged and 2-legged intruders on property: Even if the dogs haven't had any formal training, they will snap into that instinctual "pack-mode" where they synchronize their attack. It's making entering quite dangerous for any intruder, of course, as 2 dogs working together are much harder to fend off than a single dog. Stay safe in Bella Italia!
@@alexandradittmann8588 Hi thanks, great advice, she's a ferocious gaurd dog has bitten two people, killed a pitbull, killed 4 cats two snakes, 1 pine martin and I'm not proud of it but she takes it as her job. She was a rescue from Naples who had been chained all her life, never knew love or kindness, never even been in a house and she was 4 years old when I got her, she's the best friend I ever had. I've had some incidents where there have been what looks like African migrants standing above my property looking down on my property behinds the olive trees just watching and she has lost her mind. Maybe a second shepherd is a good idea. Thanks again
@@pom-pom Whew - that's quite the body count - a GSD unaliving a Pitbull is no small feat, woooow, that's some fierce dog you got there! In such settings, having a dog / a team of dogs who "loose their mind" if/when complete strangers check out your property is most definitly a winning idea. I'll never understand why so many dog owners want to STOP their dog from barking at people at the fenceline - sure, a good recall is nice, too, and excessive barking in suburban areas is annoying, but there's nothing wrong, and everything right, with a dog putting on a good display of intent at the fence.
Very accurate observation, thanks for sharing! It is, however, a purebred Estrela Mountain Dog. They are uncannily similar to Caucasian Ovcharkas, but lighter in built (less volume in the bone structure). Temperament-wise, however, very similar. Extremely loyal, affectionate to the family, usually listening to only 1 person in the household, strong defense-drive, high pain-tolerance and low tolerance for anyone or anything approaching their territory. Not easy dogs to raise and train, especially during adolescence and early adulthood, but as the saying among Estrela owners goes, if you can persevere for 3 years, you have an amazing, amazing dog. I assume it's very similar with Caucasians. I WISH the lady who was driven off her land (more details in the video) HAD a Caucasian, or an Estrela - her encounter with that stalker in the woods would have gone very, very differently. But her mellow German Shepherd didn't even perk up when the stranger walked up right to her property.
Sensors with sharp light,cameras.
Get mirror film on the windows(very effective). The stalker never know when he's been watched.
If You go or hide outside,be quiet and calm. Sneak up on him with a weapon without a word or sound.
Etc😅. Yes I know a thing or two.
Had stalkers all my life.
Lets say i have tried different things
Fx a false outside rotten staircase that collapsed midways...oh the screams..😊
But now camera system are cheap and can be fixed by a normal person. Do not use a bureau,they hire stalkers. Figured out that too.
THANK you for sharing your experiences and insights! Mirror film on windows, neat, I'd never have thought of that. Sensors with sharp light cameras, yep, those are great. And I love the rotten staircase trap, hehehe, would've loved to be a fly on the wall when that went down!
@alexandradittmann8588 hi! Thanks!
Yes. HE didn't show up again . In fact he left the country. Must add;I waited approx 15 minutes after the screams before checking. Gone. Painful for sure. And the shock effect is the most important.😁
Adding ;a drone to use now and then. With night infrared camera.
And be unpredictable fhs. Psychos are most of all afraid of..well the same.
Acting skills. Good luck.👍 Have fun😎
@@tredjesongen Wow, a drone as well - you are proficient!
@@tredjesongen Big win, driving your stalker even out of the country, that's impressive! I'll keep the 15 mins post-screaming wait-time in mind!
@@alexandradittmann8588 😁 thanks.
The only issue is; there is always more of the sort😖. I never get left alone wherever I live. Strange. One time I had a gsd and he was a masterpiece. . Even went on a military training schutz(?) dog school.
Well,we dropped out . Didn't like the way those people handled their dogs.
Nah, to me a dog is my best friend and I'm its guardian. Now,its only small dog for me after "the accident". Cant risk being pulled down. I like to walk alone in nature. That went well for approx eight months after moving here. Then my dog signaled without a sound (trained that way)that someone followed. Nice! Not. Was stupid to forget to change time and route a while.
Well well well. One late night I cornered him with his back to steep cliffs on 3 sides . Knew the terrain and calculated the time he probably thought I had already passed by.
Awkvard small talk first and then I stood there in silence just a tad too long🤭. And bid goodbye. Havent seen him since. Obviously didn't knew my background.
Been in war zones in africa. Learned to play psycho to survive. But tired of have to bend my life around precautions.
But remember to never!feel helpless.😊
Thanks for watching - please subscribe!
One woman's wilderness also had to leave her land in Canada with her German shepherd as people were turning up on her land. I think the weirdo s are praying on single women ❤
That's crazy... 😢
@@alexandradittmann8588 it's really scary, I'm from the UK and moved to the mountains of southern Italy 5 years ago, I also have a working line German shepherd, who does attack anything that comes on to the property, and I've had some strange things happen up here, but I worry that she is a dog and has no weapon and what happens if there's more than 1 person. We live in scary times 🙏
@@pom-pom Scary times indeed... So good to know that you, too, have a reliable guard dog. Hmmm... In case there's more than 1 person, what to do... One option is to get her a canine partner - maybe a male Shepherd to back her up should the need occur. Once there's 2 dogs on scene, not only the intimidation factor is higher, so people will think twice before entering your property, but also: 2 guard dogs naturally work in a team to attack intruders, I've seen this happen with both 4-legged and 2-legged intruders on property: Even if the dogs haven't had any formal training, they will snap into that instinctual "pack-mode" where they synchronize their attack. It's making entering quite dangerous for any intruder, of course, as 2 dogs working together are much harder to fend off than a single dog. Stay safe in Bella Italia!
@@alexandradittmann8588 Hi thanks, great advice, she's a ferocious gaurd dog has bitten two people, killed a pitbull, killed 4 cats two snakes, 1 pine martin and I'm not proud of it but she takes it as her job. She was a rescue from Naples who had been chained all her life, never knew love or kindness, never even been in a house and she was 4 years old when I got her, she's the best friend I ever had. I've had some incidents where there have been what looks like African migrants standing above my property looking down on my property behinds the olive trees just watching and she has lost her mind. Maybe a second shepherd is a good idea. Thanks again
@@pom-pom Whew - that's quite the body count - a GSD unaliving a Pitbull is no small feat, woooow, that's some fierce dog you got there! In such settings, having a dog / a team of dogs who "loose their mind" if/when complete strangers check out your property is most definitly a winning idea. I'll never understand why so many dog owners want to STOP their dog from barking at people at the fenceline - sure, a good recall is nice, too, and excessive barking in suburban areas is annoying, but there's nothing wrong, and everything right, with a dog putting on a good display of intent at the fence.
Oh wow great lucky dog 🐕 resting in home early ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉 Garmin shafid power full dogs and you trying very lovely and beautiful
❤ You are so kind
That looks like a Caucasian mix. I own one myself. Beautiful dog. So sad
Very accurate observation, thanks for sharing! It is, however, a purebred Estrela Mountain Dog. They are uncannily similar to Caucasian Ovcharkas, but lighter in built (less volume in the bone structure). Temperament-wise, however, very similar. Extremely loyal, affectionate to the family, usually listening to only 1 person in the household, strong defense-drive, high pain-tolerance and low tolerance for anyone or anything approaching their territory. Not easy dogs to raise and train, especially during adolescence and early adulthood, but as the saying among Estrela owners goes, if you can persevere for 3 years, you have an amazing, amazing dog. I assume it's very similar with Caucasians. I WISH the lady who was driven off her land (more details in the video) HAD a Caucasian, or an Estrela - her encounter with that stalker in the woods would have gone very, very differently. But her mellow German Shepherd didn't even perk up when the stranger walked up right to her property.