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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
⚠ Your knees are off the hook
For Bad Knees, Long Days, and Fast Dogs

Exercise a Dog With Limited Mobility

You Stand Still.
Your Dog Sprints.
★★★★★ 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.
Exercising a dog with limited mobility comes down to one move: you steer while the dog sprints. Your wrist moves the lure, the line multiplies that flick into full prey speed, and your dog does every bit of the running. Ten minutes of stalk, chase, and catch outworks the walk.
⚠ Your knees are off the hook
For Bad Knees, Long Days, and Fast Dogs
You Stand Still.
Your Dog Sprints.
★★★★★ 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.
Exercising a dog with limited mobility comes down to one move: you steer while the dog sprints. Your wrist moves the lure, the line multiplies that flick into full prey speed, and your dog does every bit of the running. Ten minutes of stalk, chase, and catch outworks the walk.

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 Mismatch

The dog needs sprints. Your body never signed up.

None of this means you failed the dog. It means the playbook was written for somebody else’s legs, and the fix is a different playbook, not more grit. The full method lives in the flirt pole training guide; the standing-still version is right below.

Every fix bills your joints.

Walk farther, take up jogging, find a hiking group: each suggestion quietly assumes your knees are volunteering. A high-drive dog can absorb every mile you have, then ask for more you don’t.

Guilt doesn’t tire a dog.

You watch the pacing and the window patrol, and you feel like the bottleneck. Feeling bad burns zero of the dog’s energy though, so the cycle just runs again tomorrow.

Slowing down wasn’t the plan.

Surgery recovery, senior years, chronic pain, or a schedule that ate your stamina. You didn’t stop loving the dog, but the old exercise playbook quietly stopped fitting the owner.

The Standing-Still Method

Ten minutes. Zero steps for you.

The pole is a lever and the line is a multiplier, so a flick you’d barely notice becomes prey-speed movement at the far end. Physics runs the workout while you steer it.

01

Claim your spot. Stand at the center of an 8-foot circle, since that’s the whole arena: backyard, garage, or living room all qualify.

02

Flick, don’t haul. Small wrist movements drive the lure in arcs and freezes, and the line does the sprinting on your behalf.

03

Let the dog run the miles. They stalk, sprint, cut, and brake around you while your feet stay planted on flat ground.

04

Catch, trade, repeat. Grant the win, trade the lure calmly, then run it again until the tank is empty, usually inside ten minutes.

Whimsy Stick Rugged XL flirt pole with three prey lures
Do the Math on Your Legs

Dog exercise, priced in your steps.

Most healthy dogs need serious daily exercise, and the AKC’s breakdown of how much is sobering reading. Every standard way of delivering it bills your body first, so compare the invoices.

MethodYour effortWear on youWhat the dog gets
Jogging togetherYou run every mile the dog runsKnees and hips take every strideA steady trot, rarely a real sprint
Long walksAn hour or more on your feetMiles add up, weather doesn’t careGood sniffing, mild cardio, no ceiling
Bike-joringBalance, gear, and nerveOne squirrel away from a crashReal speed with real risk attached
Standing-still sessionA wrist flick from one spotYou stand on flat groundAll-out sprints, cuts, and a finished hunt
★★★★★

“I love this light weight Flirt Pole! Our dog is super hyper and this pole wears him out in 5 minutes! Easy for me to handle even at my age, 74.”

Shirley M. · Verified Product Review · Amazon
Wesley · Professional Dog Trainer
★★★★★

“Neagley loves it. Engaging, exciting, fast-paced play that wears her out. She gets so excited just to see us pull out the pole. Highly recommend for high energy play.”

Brenda M. · Verified Product Review · Website
No Hard Sell

An honest fit check before you spend a dollar.

Built for you if…

  • Your knees, hips, or back vote no on jogging
  • You’re a senior sharing a house with a young rocket
  • Your doctor cleared standing and pivoting, not jogging
  • Or you’re simply done pretending you enjoy running
  • Your exercise space is a yard, garage, or living room

Skip it for now if…

  • You want the dog exercised with zero involvement, since your wrist and attention still run the game
  • Standing for ten minutes isn’t comfortable yet, and your doctor knows that timeline better than I do
  • Your dog is under vet movement restrictions
  • You won’t hold the catch-and-trade rhythm that keeps play structured
Christopher Lee Moran, working dog trainer and builder of the Whimsy Stick
From the Guy Who Built It

Nobody out-walks their dog. I stopped asking clients to try.

I’m Chris. Ten years working with dogs, roughly 400 client dogs, no certifications, no veterinary credentials. I built the Whimsy Stick because the poles on the market were junk, and I kept needing one that wasn’t.

Plenty of my clients physically couldn’t out-walk their dogs, because honestly, nobody can. I’ve handed this pole to owners in their seventies, to people fresh off surgery once their doctor cleared them to be up and moving, and to folks who simply hate jogging.

The dogs never notice the difference, since the lure runs the same either way. The owners notice everything: the same tired, satisfied dog, with none of the miles coming out of their own legs.

“You were never going to out-run your dog. The good news is you were never supposed to.”Christopher Lee Moran · Working Dog Trainer

More about Chris and how the Whimsy Stick came to be →

Sized to the Dog, Not to You

Three kits. One standing spot.

Pick by your dog’s size and bite force, because the pole in your hand stays light either way.

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
A worn lure never stops the game
  • Everything in the Rugged XL Bundle
  • 5 prey lures total
  • Spare 800-lb Dyneema line included
  • Line swap takes about 2 minutes
  • 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 →

🛡
The Risk Is Mine

30-Day Standing-Still Workout or Your Money Back.

Give it 30 days from one spot. If your dog isn’t ending sessions tired and settling faster afterward, email me directly for a full refund with free return shipping. The risk stays on my side of the line.

Before You Buy

Real questions from owners who can’t run.

How do I exercise a dog with limited mobility?

Bring the exercise into an 8-foot circle instead of stretching it across a neighborhood. With a flirt pole you stand in one spot while the lure sprints your dog in arcs around you. Ten minutes of stalk, chase, and catch outworks the walk you’ve been forcing yourself through.

What can I do for my dog while I recover from surgery?

Once your own doctor says you’re good to be up and pivoting for ten minutes, a standing-still session covers the dog’s hard exercise. Your wrist steers, your feet stay planted, and the dog does all the sprinting. Until then, hand the session to a friend or family member, because the method takes about a minute to explain.

I’m a senior with a young high-energy dog. What actually helps?

One of my customers is 74 and wears her hyper dog out in five minutes with this pole. The physics do the heavy lifting, since a small wrist flick becomes full lure speed at the end of the line. Short daily sessions keep a young dog satisfied without asking your body for miles.

Is a flirt pole heavy or hard to handle?

No, the pole is lightweight fiberglass and the motion is a wrist flick, not a swing. If a session leaves anything sore, you’re working too hard; let the line do it. The Standard is the lighter build for dogs 30 lbs and under.

My dog pulls hard on walks. Does this help?

Usually, because a dog that has already sprinted and finished a hunt has less rocket fuel to spend on the leash. Run the session before the walk and the walk gets calmer. You also never hold the dog during play, only the pole, so their strength never lands on your shoulder.

What if my dog is stronger than I am?

Strength barely enters into it. Your dog chases the lure, not you, and the pole plus line absorb the action, so you’re steering rather than tug-of-warring. Trade the lure calmly after each catch and even a 90-lb dog stays workable from one standing spot.

How long is a standing-still session?

Ten minutes covers most healthy adult dogs, or a couple of five-minute rounds if that suits you better. End on a catch so the hunt finishes, because a finished hunt is what settles the dog, not the raw minutes.

Do I still need to walk my dog?

Yes, though for different reasons: sniffing, bathroom breaks, and seeing the world. The AVMA’s walking guidance covers what those outings do for a dog. The pole takes over the exhaustion job, so walks can shrink to whatever distance suits you.

Last Call

The miles were never yours to run. Hand them to the dog.

Ten minutes, one spot on flat ground, and a dog that finally empties the tank. Thirty days to prove it on your own dog, with a full refund if it doesn’t.

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