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Whimsy Stick

4.9 across 291 verified reviews on 7 platforms / 30-day money-back guarantee / Free US shipping on Rugged XL
🔥 Rugged XL In Stock · $94.95 · Ships 1-3 days
⚠ Ten minutes. That’s the whole ask
For Owners With Calendars, Not Free Mornings

Big Dog Toys to Keep Them Busy

Too Busy for the Dog
You Love? Fix That.
★★★★★ 5.0 from every product review
30-Day money-back guarantee
Free shipping on Rugged XL
Rugged XL In Stock · $94.95 · Ships 1-3 days
Direct from the trainer who built it.
Big dog toys that actually keep them busy share one trait: they finish the job. A ten-minute flirt pole session before your first meeting runs the complete hunting sequence, stalk, chase, capture, win, so the drive resolves and your dog settles through the workday instead of narrating your calls.
⚠ Ten minutes. That’s the whole ask
For Owners With Calendars, Not Free Mornings
Too Busy for the Dog
You Love? Fix That.
★★★★★ 5.0 from every product review
30-Day money-back guarantee
Rugged XL In Stock · $94.95 · Ships 1-3 days
Direct from the trainer who built it.
Big dog toys that actually keep them busy share one trait: they finish the job. A ten-minute flirt pole session before your first meeting runs the complete hunting sequence, stalk, chase, capture, win, so the drive resolves and your dog settles through the workday instead of narrating your calls.

What dog owners say.

★★★★★ Jake K. “Would give 6 stars if I could”
★★★★★ Anna C. “Takes his high-drive edge off”
★★★★★ Flavia G. “Life changing since our dog doesn’t fetch”
★★★★★ David M. “Border collie. Only thing that wears him out.”
★★★★★ Brenda M. “Engaging, fast-paced play that wears her out”
★★★★★ Ken R. “5 minutes. 6 month puppy. Done.”
★★★★★ Shirley M. “74 years old. 5 min. Dog tired.”
★★★★★ Ben R. “One of the few things that actually tires him out”
★★★★★ Jake K. “Would give 6 stars if I could”
★★★★★ Anna C. “Takes his high-drive edge off”
★★★★★ Flavia G. “Life changing since our dog doesn’t fetch”
★★★★★ David M. “Border collie. Only thing that wears him out.”
★★★★★ Brenda M. “Engaging, fast-paced play that wears her out”
★★★★★ Ken R. “5 minutes. 6 month puppy. Done.”
★★★★★ Shirley M. “74 years old. 5 min. Dog tired.”
★★★★★ Ben R. “One of the few things that actually tires him out”
The Working Owner’s Loop

The problem isn’t your hours. It’s the kind of tired.

Every busy owner I train runs the same loop: rushed walk, guilty commute, wired dog, repeat. The loop breaks when the exercise changes kind, not length, and my flirt pole training guide walks you through exactly that switch.

The guilt walk fools nobody.

You squeezed in twenty minutes before the 8:30 standup, but the dog came home with legs barely used and a brain untouched. Loose-leash mileage doesn’t scratch what’s actually itching.

The 3pm Zoom bark.

Right as you unmute, the barking starts. That’s not spite. It’s unspent drive leaking out sideways, because nothing in the day gave it anywhere to land.

Daycare math never adds up.

Two extra drives a day, hundreds a month, and the dog comes home overstimulated instead of satisfied. You outsourced the tiring, yet somehow kept the chaos.

The Ten-Minute Shift

Coffee’s brewing. Run the hunt.

This is the core of what I teach in how to exercise a dog without walking, compressed for a workday.

01

Clear an 8-foot circle. Backyard, garage, or living room all work, since the game runs on a radius, not an acreage.

02

Drag the lure low and erratic. Your dog stalks, chases, and cuts, and the full predatory sequence fires for the first time all week.

03

Let them catch and win. The win is the off switch, because a hunt that completes is a hunt that stops asking.

04

Hand over a chew, open the laptop. The drive resolved, so the dog settles through your calls instead of narrating them.

Whimsy Stick flirt pole product photo
The Busy-Owner Math

Four ways to tire a dog. One fits a workday.

Run the numbers on what each option costs you in time and money, then look at what your dog actually gets out of it. Ten minutes of full-sequence work tires most dogs harder than a 45-minute leash walk, because everything fires at once instead of nothing firing at all.

OptionYour timeOngoing costActually tired?
Dawn hour walk60+ minutes, every day, foreverFree, paid in sleepLegs tired, brain still wired
Midday dog walkerScheduling, key handoffs, textsHundreds per monthA potty break, not a workout
Doggy daycareTwo extra drives a dayHundreds more per monthOverstimulated, not satisfied
Whimsy Stick session10 minutes before your first meetingOne-time purchaseHunt closed, dog settled
★★★★★

“This thing is a lifesaver. We have an extremely active working dog mix 6 month old puppy and 5 minutes of this tires him out. Highly recommend.”

Ken R. · Verified Product Review · Website

“I love how much more streamlined this is, compared to other flirt poles I’ve used.”

Jennifer H. · Verified Product Review · Website

See all 291 reviews across 7 platforms →

Honest Fit Check

Built for full calendars. Not for every household.

Get one if…

  • You work full time and the 6am guilt is a daily tenant
  • Your dog barks or paces through your calls
  • You have ten minutes, but never sixty
  • Your yard is small, or the “yard” is a living room
  • Your dog is over 30 lbs or a power chewer; the Rugged XL was built for exactly that

Skip it if…

  • You want a self-playing toy; this needs your hands for ten minutes
  • You plan to replace every walk forever; dogs still need the outing
  • Your vet has restricted sprinting until cleared
  • Your dog ignores anything that moves (rare, but it happens)
Christopher Lee Moran, working dog trainer and builder of the Whimsy Stick
Built by a Working Trainer

Most “bad” dogs I meet just have employed owners.

I’m Chris. Working dog trainer, ten years with dogs, roughly 400 client dogs. No certifications, no veterinary credentials. I built the Whimsy Stick because the poles on the market were junk.

The busiest owners in my client book had the most wound-up dogs, yet the fix was never more hours. It was better minutes, because a dog doesn’t need your whole morning. It needs one finished hunt.

That trade, ten focused minutes for a calm workday, is the whole pitch. You can read more about me and the method on the about page.

“Your dog doesn’t count the minutes you’re gone. They count the drive that never got spent.”Christopher Lee Moran · Working Dog Trainer
Pick by Size, Not Price

Three models. One calm workday.

Dogs 30 lbs and under get the Standard, while dogs over 30 lbs or power chewers of any size get the Rugged XL.

Standard
Dogs 30 lbs and under · 1 prey lure
$55.95
$20 flat US shipping
  • Lightweight springy fiberglass pole
  • 1 prey lure (Unlucky the Squirrel)
  • 500-lb Kevlar braided cord, no bungee
  • 8-foot play radius
  • 30-day money-back guarantee
Get the Standard →
Most Gear
Rugged XL Pro Kit
Dogs over 30 lbs · 5 prey lures + spare line
$129.95
Free US shipping · Ships 1-3 days
  • Everything in the Rugged XL
  • 5 prey lures so play never stalls
  • Spare 800-lb Dyneema line included
  • For the hardest-driving dogs
  • 30-day money-back guarantee
Get the Pro Kit →

What you read here reflects my own experience training dogs. Not veterinary or behavioral medical advice. See the full exercise disclaimer →

🛡

30-Day Calmer Workday or Your Money Back.

Run the ten-minute routine for a month. If your workdays aren’t quieter and your dog isn’t more settled, email me directly for a full refund with free return shipping. No hoops, no interrogation, no “have you tried a longer walk.”

Before You Buy

Busy-owner questions, straight answers.

How do I exercise my dog when I work full time?

Run a ten-minute flirt pole session before your first meeting, because a completed hunt settles a dog for hours in a way a rushed walk can’t. Add a short sniff walk for potty and decompression, then hand over a chew while you work.

Is it OK to skip the morning walk?

You can swap a rushed guilt-walk for a structured session, but don’t cut outings entirely. Walks still handle sniffing, potty, and world exposure, while the pole handles the exhaustion job. The AKC’s exercise guidelines are a solid baseline for your dog’s total needs.

Will 10 minutes really hold my dog through a workday?

For most healthy adult dogs, a structured session plus a chew or settle routine holds until evening. I won’t promise a comatose dog, though. High-drive dogs often want a second short round at lunch, and puppies need shorter, gentler sessions either way.

Should I run the session before work or after?

Before, if barking and pacing through your calls is the problem. After, if the dog explodes the moment the laptop closes. Plenty of my clients split it: five minutes at dawn, five at five.

What about the midday slump?

A five-minute round between meetings resets most dogs, since the sequence closes fast once they know the game. No gap in the calendar? A stuffed chew after the morning session usually bridges it.

Do I still need to walk my dog at all?

Yes. This replaces the exhaustion job, not the outing, and dogs still need sniffing, potty breaks, and the world beyond the yard. The AVMA’s walking guidance covers why the outing itself matters.

What if I have no yard?

An 8-foot circle is the whole footprint, so a garage, patio, or cleared living room works. Indoor sessions run slower and tighter, though the workload on the dog stays the same. Grippy flooring matters more than square footage.

One Last Thing

Ten minutes tomorrow beats an hour of guilt tonight.

Your calendar isn’t getting emptier, and your dog isn’t getting less of a dog. Close the hunt before the first meeting, then work in peace.

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