As this is a very serious situation, you can certainly try the radio fence. However, my experience with these is that they do not always work. For a dog who has been used to gaining freedom, the dog may well be willing to take the shock to get the freedom. This has been the case with many people I have worked with. I find it has about a 70 percent success rate.
I think it would be better to put up a higher, better fence. Invest in something that will really keep the dog in. You may even put up something at the top of the fence to keep the dog in. Fencing companies sell angled fence toppers to help keep dogs in - or people out. This would be a good option. If digging is a problem, as they put the fence in, have them put chicken wire down a few few under the ground so the dog cant dig out. Make sure all areas of the fence are tight, including the gate. Don't pile anything up against the fence that the dog can use to climb over the fence.
And, yes, a formal class is an excellent idea and a must do. Let your trainer know the problem so they can focus on those areas with you. If things continue to disinegrate, find an animal behaviorist in your area to help you.
One thing you must not do is tie up your dog when outside. This will cause the situation to worsen.
You sound like a great owner, and you are looking into all the right areas. I'm sure you will get this under control.
MACH Aslan RE, MX, MXJ, EAC, EJC, OCC, Wv-N, TN-N, TG-N, R-SN, J-SN, R2-CL, CGC, TDI, FFX-AG (five year old sheltie)
Jericho OA, NAJ, R1-MCL, CGC, FFX-AP (three year old sheltie)
Laika NAJ, CGC (nine year old retired American Eskimo)
I've been defrosted.
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